Plantation was an early method of colonization in which settlers were 'planted' abroad in order to establish a permanent or semi-permanent colonial base. Such plantations were also frequently intended to promote civility and Christianity among nearby
indigenous peoples, as can be seen both in James I's Irish Plantations, and in the early East-Coast plantations in America (such as that at
Roanoke). Although the term 'planter' to refer to a settler first appears as early as the 16th-century, the earliest true colonial 'plantation' is usually agreed to be that of the
Plantation of Ulster.
The greatest use of the plantation economy was in the 18th century, especially the
sugar plantations in the
Caribbean that depended on slave labor. Most of that time
Britain prospered as the top slaving nation in the
Atlantic world. Over 2,500,000 slaves were transported to the Caribbean plantations between 1690 and 1807. Because slave life was so harsh on these plantations and slaves died without reproducing themselves, a constant supply of new slaves from
Africa was required to maintain the plantation economy. What has been called a "natural decrease" among the slave population continued for two centuries. In this sense, a plantation represented a killing machine.
[1] In 1789
Saint-Domingue, producer of 40 percent of the world's sugar, was the most valuable colony on earth. Slaves outnumbered whites and coloreds by at least eight to one but provided all of the manual labor. Slave labor created a dramatic change in the eating habits in Britons, one of the greatest in human history. In 1700, Britons used an average of four pounds of sugar a year, but by 1800 they used an average of 16 pounds a year.
Ireland
The
Plantations of Ireland were an instrument of retribution and
colonization after several Irish rebellions against English rule throughout the 16th and 17th centuries. The largest settlement, the
Plantation of Ulster, was established following the rebellion of
Hugh Roe O'Donnell and
Hugh O'Neill in the
Nine Years' War (
1594-
1603). The plantations were seen as part of process that would Anglicise Ireland, as well as a means of maintaining English political control in Ireland. Lands were seized from the native landowners both as punishment for rebellion and as punishment for remaining Catholic rather than
conforming to the (
Protestant)
established church. These lands were given to
English (and later,
Scottish) Protestant settlers who would be loyal to the Crown and keep the native Irish under control.
Scottish highlands
During the
Middle Ages the
Scottish government planted
Scots-speaking
lowland merchant colonies in the
Gaidhealtachd (the
Gaelic-speaking part of
Scotland), for example at
Campbeltown and
Cromarty.
North America
Plantation colonies
Maryland,
Virginia
During the 17h century, the Chesapeake bay area was immensely hospitable to tobacco cultivation. Ships annually hauled 1.5 million pounds (680,000 kilograms) of tobacco out to the Bay by the 1630s, and about 40 million pounds (18 million kilograms) by the end of the century. Farmers responded to the falling prices by growing even more tobacco. The labor supply from Africa (
slaves) was expensive, and therefore they had to rely on much cheaper
indentured servants.
European colonists didn't regard the land as belonging the
Native Americans, so the
Plantations of New England were seen as occupying virgin land. The first English settlement, the
Plymouth Plantation, was to create a new beginning for English dissenters and so essentially
utopian. Later plantations were more overtly entrepreneurial: European investors funded colonists in the expectation of good returns. Example include the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, the
New Haven Colony, the Dutch settlement of
New Amsterdam (now New York) and the French
Nouvelle Caledonie in Canada.
In the state of
Maine, the old meaning has been preserved in the name of local government jurisdictions. It is also preserved in the full name of
Rhode Island, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
Footnotes
1. A Brief History of the Caribbean, , Jan, Rogozinski, Facts on File, Inc., 1999, ISBN 0-8160-3811-2
References
★
Albert Galloway Keller,
1908, ''Colonization: A Study of the Founding of New Societies'', Boston: Ginn & Company
See also
★
Plantation (Maine)