The Voyage of the Frolic: New England Merchants and the Opium Trade.
Randall, Stephen J.
The Voyage of the Frolic: New England Merchants and the Opium
Trade, by Thomas N. Layton. Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, 1997. xi, 227 pp. $24.95.
What a wonderful treat this slim volume is to read. Thomas Layton
has integrated into this important study the attention to and patience
for detail of the archeologist, the painstaking archival skills and
detective work of the historian, and the craftsmanship of a very good
writer.
The study began with the chance discovery in 1984 by Layton and his
archeology students of Chinese porcelain fragments at the site of a Pomo Indian village on the pacific coast north of San Francisco. His
obviously keen curiosity whetted, Layton gradually pieced together a
fascinating account of the history of the Frolic, a New England-owned
but Baltimore built clipper ship that had been wrecked off the coast of
that village in 1850 and which had been the source of that mysterious
Chinese porcelain as well as the local folklore of Pomo women wearing
Chinese silks in the 1850s.
Layton's remarkably thorough research led him to the records
of the Baltimore shipbuilding firm of the Gardner Brothers, the pages of
the south and east Asian newspapers in search of shipping announcements
and to the extensive collection of the papers of Augustine Heard &
Co. in the Baker Library of the Harvard School of Business
Administration. The result is the careful interweaving of the history of
a single ship which engaged in New England-Orient trade with the much
larger story of the opium trade in regional and international history in
the 1840s. It would be difficult to imagine what other dimensions Layton
could have added to the rich tapestry he has produced. His
archeologist's eye for detail provides the reader with a careful
account of the history of shipbuilding in Baltimore, and his
historian's sense of the importance of that larger context provides
excellent insight into the ways in which the opium trade operated
between India and China in the 1840s, the dominant place of Great
Britain and the lesser role of American commercial and diplomatic
interests in the region. His account of the development of American
involvement in the opium trade is business history at its best. The
study shows in detail how trade was financed, and how opium was
packaged, valued, and traded in Chinese markets. There is even a
well-crafted and fascinating vignette on the illegal African slave trade involving Baltimore-built but refitted ships at a time that the later
important black abolitionist and slave Frederick Douglass (then known as
Fred Bailey) was working in that shipyard.
It was not until 1838 that the British permitted American-owned
vessels to carry opium from India to China, although American ships had
earlier been involved in the export of lower quality Turkish opium into
the market. Within a few years of American engagement in the trade,
however, Chinese authorities were faced with what they considered an
increasingly serious problem of social disorder and economic threat
occasioned by the high levels of opium imports into the country. By 1837
opium represented fifty-seven per cent of the value of all imports into
the country, and since payment for those imports was made in Chinese
silver, the outflow of silver created serious economic difficulties.
Such problems clearly undermined the capacity of the Chinese emperor to
control his subjects, with the result that he and his officials in 1839
banned the opium trade to all Chinese ports. Prior to 1839 the trade had
been conducted through Chinese-appointed intermediaries known as Hong,
and corruption was widespread. As part of the crackdown, in 1839 Chinese
officials arrested Chinese engaged in illegal operations, seized foreign
property, and totally closed Canton to foreign trade. The British
retaliated in what came to be known as the Opium War of 1840-42. The
treaty of Nanking which ended hostilities demonstrated British dominance
in the area. The Chinese government ceded Hong Kong to Great Britain and
paid an indemnity for lost and damaged property. Most important for the
opium trade, the treaty provided that five treaty ports in China would
be open to foreign merchants, and although the still legal opium was not
mentioned in the agreement, it was clear what the dominant commodity
would be in the trade that passed through those ports.
It was into this newly-stabilized trading environment that the
Frolic sailed under Captain Edward Faucon (of Two Years Before the Mast fame) in 1845. For four years the Frolic and Faucon established an
enviable record for speed, efficiency, and profitability in the opium
trade until after 1849 when larger, more reliable, and faster
steam-powered vessels drove the clipper ships out of the market. It was
at this stage that the Frolic was reassigned by Heard & Co. to the
wealthy California gold rush trade between oriental markets and San
Francisco, and it was on its last voyage with its cargo of Chinese
silks, porcelains, furnishings, and jewelry that the Frolic ended its
career on the rocks off the Mendocino coast.
Stephen J. Randall University of Calgary