Everything about British Guiana totally explained
British Guiana was the name of the
British colony on the northern coast of
South America, now the independent nation of
Guyana.
The area was originally settled by the
Dutch as the colonies of
Essequibo,
Demerara, and
Berbice. These three colonies were captured by the British in
1796, officially ceded to the
United Kingdom in
1814, and consolidated into a single colony in
1831. The colony's capital was at
Georgetown (known as Stabroek prior to 1812). Guyana went on to become independent of the
United Kingdom on
May 26,
1966.
History of the colony
Establishment
There had been at least two unsuccessful attempts by the British to colonize the lands that would later be known as British Guiana during the
17th century, when the Dutch had established two colonies in the area:
Essequibo, administered by the
Dutch West India Company, and
Berbice, administered by the
Berbice Association. A third colony,
Demerara, was established under the West India Company in the mid-
18th century. Effective British control began in 1796 during the
French Revolutionary Wars, at which time the
Netherlands were under French occupation and
Great Britain and
France were at war. A British expeditionary force was dispatched from its colony of
Barbados to seize the colonies from the French-dominated
Batavian Republic. The colonies surrendered without a struggle, and initially very little changed, as the British agreed to allow the long-established laws of the colonies to remain in force.
In
1802 the colonies were returned to the Batavian Republic under the terms of the
Treaty of Amiens, but the United Kingdom seized the colonies again less than one year later upon resumption of hostilities with France in the
Napoleonic Wars in
1803. The three colonies were officially ceded to the United Kingdom in the
Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814. The UK continued separate administration of the colonies until
1812, when the administration of Essequibo and Demerara was combined. In 1831, the administration Essequibo-Demerara and Berbice was combined, and the united colony became known as British Guiana.
Economy
The
economy of British Guiana was completely dominated by
sugarcane production until the
1880s, when falling cane sugar prices stimulated a greater shift toward
rice farming,
mining and
forestry. However, sugarcane remained a significant part of the economy (sugar would account for nearly 50% of exports in
1959). Under the Dutch, settlement and economic activity was concentrated around sugar
plantations lying inland from the coast. Under the British, cane planting expanded to richer coastal lands, with greater coastline protection. Until the
abolition of
slavery in the
British Empire in
1834, sugar planters relied very heavily on slave labour to produce sugar.
In the 1880s
gold and
diamond deposits were discovered in British Guiana, but they didn't produce significant revenue.
Bauxite deposits, however, proved more promising and would remain an important part of the economy. The colony didn't develop any significant
manufacturing industries, other than sugar factories, rice mills,
sawmills, and certain small-scale industries (including a
brewery, a
soap factory, a
biscuit factory and an
oxygen-
acetylene plant, among others).
The
London-based Booker Group of companies (Booker Brothers, McConnell & Co., Ltd.) dominated the economy of British Guiana. The Bookers had owned sugar plantations in the colony since the early
19th century; by the end of the century owned a majority of them; and by
1950 owned all but three. The increasing success and wealth of the Bookers Group allowed them to expand internationally, and to also become involved in
rum,
pharmaceuticals,
publishing,
advertising,
retail stores,
lumber, and
petroleum, among other industries. The Booker Group became the largest employer in the colony, leading some to refer to it as "Booker's Guiana".
Administration
The British long continued the forms of Dutch colonial government in British Guiana. A Court of Policy exercised both
legislative and
executive functions under the direction of the colonial
Governor. A group known as the Financial Representatives sat with the Court of Policy in a Combined Court to set
tax policies. A majority of the members of the Courts was appointed by the Governor, the rest were selected by a College of Kiezers (Electors). The Kiezers were elected by a restrictive
franchise, limited to the larger landowners of the colony. The Courts were thus initially dominated by the sugar planters and their representatives.
In
1891 the College of Kiezers was abolished in favour of
direct election of the elective membership of the Courts. The Court of Policy became half elected and half appointed, and all of the Financial Representatives were now elected. The executive functions of the Court of Policy were transferred to a new Executive Council under the control of the Governor. Property qualifications were significantly relaxed for voters and for candidates for the Courts.
In
1928 the
British Government abolished the Dutch-influenced
constitution and replaced it with a
crown colony constitution. A Legislative Council with an appointed majority was established, and the administrative powers of the Governor were strengthened. These constitutional changes were not popular among the Guyanese, who viewed them as a step backward. The franchise was also extended to women.
In
1938 the West India Royal Commission ("The Moyne Commission") was appointed to investigate the economic and social condition of all the British colonies in the
Caribbean region after a number of civil and labour disturbances. Among other changes, the Commission recommended some constitutional reforms. As a result, in
1943 a majority of the Legislative Council seats became elective, the property qualifications for voters and for candidates for the Council were lowered, and the bar on women and clergy serving on the Council was abolished. The Governor retained control of the Executive Council, which had the power to veto or pass laws against the wishes of the Legislative Council.
The next round of constitutional reforms came in
1953. A
bicameral
legislature consisting of a lower House of Assembly and an upper State Council was established. The voting membership of the House of Assembly was entirely elective. The State Council had a nominated membership appointed by the Governor and the House of Assembly and possessed limited revisionary powers. A Court of Policy became the executive body, consisting of the Governor and other colonial officials. Universal adult suffrage was instituted, and the property qualifications for office abolished.
The election of
April 27, 1953 under the new system provoked a serious constitutional crisis. The
People's Progressive Party (PPP) won 18 of the 24 seats in the House of Assembly. This result alarmed the British Government, which was surprised by the strong showing of the PPP, and which viewed the PPP as too friendly with
communist organizations. As a result of its fears of communist influence in the colony, the British Government suspended the constitution, declared a state of emergency, and militarily occupied British Guiana on
October 9, 1953.
Under the direction of the
British Colonial Office, the Governor assumed direct rule of the colony under an Interim Government, which continued until
1957. On
August 12, 1957 elections were held in which the PPP won nine of fourteen elective seats in a new legislature.
A constitutional convention convened in
London in March
1960 reached agreement on yet another new legislature, to consist of an elected House of Assembly (35 seats) and a nominated Senate (13 seats). In the ensuing election of
August 21,
1961 the PPP won 20 seats in the House of Assembly, entitling it to appoint eight senators as the majority party. Upon the 1961 election, British Guiana also became
self-governing, except as to defence and external matters. The leader of the majority party became
Prime Minister, who then named a Council of Ministers, replacing the former Executive Council.
From
1962 to
1964, riots, strikes and other disturbances stemming from racial, social and economic conflicts delayed full independence for British Guiana. The leaders of the political parties reported to the British Colonial Secretary that they were unable to reach agreement on the remaining details of forming an independent government. The British Colonial Office then intervened by imposing its own independence plan, in part requiring another election under a new
proportional representation system. It was assumed that this system would reduce the number of seats won by the PPP and prevent it from obtaining a clear majority.
The
December 7, 1964 elections for the new legislature gave the PPP 45.8% (24 seats), the
People's National Congress (PNC) 40.5% (22 seats), and the United Force (UF) 12.4% (7 seats). The UF agreed to form a
coalition government with the PNC, and accordingly the PNC leader became the new Prime Minister. In November
1965 an independence conference in London quickly reached agreement on an independent constitution, and set the date for independence as May 26, 1966. On that date, at 12 midnight, British Guiana became the new nation of Guyana.
Territorial disputes
Western boundary with Venezuela
In
1840 the British Government assigned
Robert Hermann Schomburgk to survey and mark out the western boundary of British Guiana with newly independent
Venezuela. Venezuela didn't accept the
Schomburgk Line, which placed the entire
Cuyuni River basin within the colony. Venezuela claimed all lands west of the
Essequibo River as its territory (see map above).
The dispute continued until
1897, when
U.S. President Grover Cleveland, who favored the Venezuelan side, used diplomatic pressure to get the British to agree to
arbitration of the issue. A
arbitration tribunal convened in
Paris in
1898, and issued its
award in
1899. The tribunal awarded about 94% percent of the disputed territory to British Guiana. A commission surveyed a new border according to the award, and the parties accepted the boundary in
1905. After his death, Severo Mallet-Prevost, legal counsel for Venezuela and a named partner in the
New York law firm
Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle published a letter alleging that the judges on the tribunal acted improperly as a result of a back room deal between
Russia and
Great Britain.
There the matter rested until 1962, when Venezuela renewed its 19th century claim, alleging that the arbitral award was invalid. The British Government rejected this claim, asserting the validity of the 1899 award. The British Guiana Government, then under the leadership of the PPP, also strongly rejected this claim. Efforts by all the parties to resolve to matter on the eve of Guyana's independence in 1966 failed. As of November
2006 the dispute remains unresolved.
Eastern boundary with Suriname
Robert Schomburgk's 1840 commission also included a survey of the colony's eastern boundary with the Netherlands' colony of
Dutch Guiana, now the independent nation of
Suriname. The 1899 arbitration award settling the British Guiana--Venezuela border made reference to the border with Suriname as continuing to the source of the
Courantyne River, which it named as the Kutari River. The Netherlands raised a diplomatic protest, claiming that the New River, and not the Kutari, was to be regarded as the source of the Courantyne and the boundary. The British Government in
1900 replied that the issue was already settled by the long acceptance of the Kutari as the boundary.
In 1962, the Netherlands finally made formal claim to the "New River Triangle", the triangular-shaped region between the New and Kutari rivers that was in dispute. The Suriname colonial government, and after
1975 the independent Suriname government, maintained the Dutch position; while the British Guiana Government, and later the independent Guyanese government, maintained the British position. On September
2007 the maritime dispute was resolved with the United Nations arbitrators favouring Guyana.
Stamps and postal history of British Guiana
Further Information
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