Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
BRITISH STUDIES
I. The Britain’s Colonial Railways in India
In this study, we discuss the period from 1850 up to 1889 in the history of Great Britain,
during which we find the beginning of the construction of the Railways in India and
some of the events during the first twenty years that demonstrate the beginning of the
fall of the British Colonialism in India. At first, in 1846 the revenue commissioner of
Bombay, T. Williamson, wrote to the chairman of the Great Indian imperial railway
Peninsular Railway Company stating that the works are about to begin (Satya, 2008:
69). The Indian Railways construction and ownership was totally on the hands of
private British companies with the backing of the Indian government. “There were on
average 1,405 miles under construction every year until the end of the 19th century and
some 150 million pounds-sterling was invested in Indian railways (ibid.: 69). In fact, the
Indian government became the guarantor to the railway British shareholders and
continued to function under this guarantee system. So, the Government of India had a
strong influence over railways, but the Government’s role increased with time with
nationalization rising (Bogart & Chaudhary, 2011). However, the railway construction
“has accelerated the colonisation of the Indian economy and created a new phase of
British imperialism” (Satya, 2008: 72).
We then move on to a comparative analysis of the advantages that the Railways
brought to India, but some negative points of view too. It is still argued if the Railway
in India is a gift from the British since the railways were first conceived of by the East
India Company for its own benefit. Yet, the actual conception and construction were a
colonial plan for “the British shareholders made huge amounts of money by investing
in the railways, and the government guaranteed double returns, paid entirely from
Indian, and not British, taxes” (Tharmoor, 2017). In addition, the railways helped to
connect the country and enable the transport of goods cheaper and faster so that it
allowed the development of more markets (Wolmar, 2017a). But again, the use of the
new railways was intended to transport extracted resources to British ports for their
benefit, however people starting using them, not only the colonists but they served
Indian people too. This last benefit was not so positive, since the third-class carriages
were lacking amenities, Indians were herded and treated like animals which brought
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
up a lot of hatred against the colonists and rose discrimination and racism in the
country (Tharmoor, 2017).
Furthermore, the Indian railways offered to India by the British companies, also offered
the valuable technical knowledge and infrastructure in India. With this we do not
suggest that the railways were welcomed by Indians; they were often seen as the
principal instrument of British colonization. For example, the construction of the railway
network envisaged by Lord Dalhousie from 1853 was quickly destroyed after the 1857
Rebellion of Indians (Wolmar, 2017a). Also, in the mid-1880s, we find various lines to
be built to relieve famine, though they never did so. “They were built with funds from
the Rothschild family but the British government decided that their guaranteed profits
should be paid by an extra tax on the local peasantry” (Wolmar, 2017b: 2).
Finally, another negative point was that in 1859, a local East India Railway engineer
brought the cholera epidemic, and infected thousands of labourers working on the
railroads and many more serious diseases (malaria, smallpox etc.) were quickly
spreading by workers coming from various places of the Indian countryside which
became a burden to the progress of the works (Satya, 2008). The guarantee system
had also helped to the commercialization of agriculture, which however brought
inflation in the prices in the first years and led to productivity decline (Satya, 2008: 75).
So, in my opinion, it is difficult to argue in favour of or against the construction of the
Indian Railways by the British because even if it started as a British monopole and a
right to exploit the country for their colonial benefit, the gains from this network, the
infrastructure and the technical knowledge helped India progress in terms of its
agriculture, trade, technology, and cultural matters.
II. Two Illustrations of Britain’s Railway in India
1st illustration
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
Source1: https://tinyurl.com/nahfp978
This illustration was chosen because it depicts one of the negative aspects that arose
during the constructions of the Indian Railways. We mean the spread of famine and
different epidemic diseases in the country. This picture depicts the famine in Bengal
and the Indian mode of irrigation by extracting water from rivers with small containers
carried by humans. The picture was published in “The Illustrated London News on 24
January 1874 on page 732.
In particular, the impact of railroads on situations like this shows that Indians have
gained the ability to transport commodities over long distances. However, the role of
these huge constructions on the everyday life helped catalyse the natural processes
of the spread of diseases, which was further magnified in the context of famine (ibid.).
For the British, it was not the construction sites, but the failure of rains that caused
famine, yet other scholars suggest that undrinkable water and poor soil quality pushed
https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.environmentandsoci
ety.org%2Fsites%2Fdefault%2Ffiles%2Fthumbnails%2Fimage%2Findian_irrigation_
2.jpg&imgrefurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.environmentandsociety.org%2Fexhibitions%
2Ffamines-india%2Finfrastructure-and-railroads&tbnid=bWwvwmG-pvE7M&vet=10CA8QxiAoAmoXChMIiJG5hYn38AIVAAAAAB0AAAAAEAM..i&docid=P
n4AKF6Yzqa9M&w=2863&h=1974&itg=1&q=indian%20railways%20construction%20in%20the
%2019th%20century&client=safari&ved=0CA8QxiAoAmoXChMIiJG5hYn38AIVAAAA
AB0AAAAAEAM
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2
http://www.environmentandsociety.org/exhibitions/famines-india/infrastructure-and-railroads
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
to such a situation. This image shows that even the high technical expertise could not
help progress when the irrigation system was still poor. The latter was the main factor
of the spread of epidemic diseases and contributed to the loss of hundreds of lives in
India in the mid-19th century.
2nd Illustration
The second illustration just below demonstrates the power of the Indian government
during all the years of the Railway constructions since it played the role of the guarantor
of the works that were ruled only by the British. We see a capture of “Holding court”
between the lieutenant-general of the Punjab which takes tea with maharajas and
Rajas in 1875. The image is published in The Guardian in 2017 under the article: “ 'But
what about the railways ...?' The myth of Britain's gifts to India” and the caption of the
photo suggests that many “apologists for empire like to claim that the British brought
democracy, the rule of law and trains to India”3. However, we choose this picture
because it reflects this flagrant predatory nature of the imperial Britain and coincides
with the colonial exploitative project of Railway constructions in India. This project
always demanded the guarantee of the Indian government and showed a benevolence
façade of the Britain, yet the reality was that the British expected only benefit for them:
see the imperialistic character and colonial actions that had led to demoralizing India
and finally prepared the fall of the British Empire due to new conflicts that destroyed
the security they had managed to build for years (Tharoor, 2017).
3
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/08/india-britain-empire-railways-myths-gifts
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Source: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/08/india-britain-empire-railways-myths-gifts
III. 1950-1980: The Commonwealth immigrants and the “Windrush generation”
in UK
In this section, we discuss the period from 1948 up to 1980 in the history of Great
Britain, during which we find the massive immigration of citizens from Commonwealth
migrating to Great Britain in order to have a better future. The first generation of modern
immigration towards UK is called the “Windrush” generation taken after the name of
the ship “Empire Windrush” which brought the first large groups of Caribbean citizens
of Commonwealth to UK in 1948 (Lassalle, 2016: 183-184). We actually choose that
difficult period after the WW2 that made the British government encourage people of
the colonies to come to UK to help the nation to regain its proper power and glory4.
This generation helped UK fill the gaps in the labour market and took upon jobs mostly
in the newly created National Health Service (NHS) and London Transport
4
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/22/windrush-story-not-a-rosy-one-evenbefore-ship-arrived
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
(Chassaigne, 2015). In 1948, the British government passed the “British Nationality
Act”, which has been a matter of debate even while those people were approaching
UK; an act that also gained royal ascent in July 1948 and the Commonwealth
immigrants became British subjects with full rights (ibid.).
During the years after this first immigration wave from the Caribbean, the immigration
in UK has really risen and the number of migrants asking for citizenship and a job
pushed to the establishment of a Cabinet committee in June 1950 that could supervise
the immigration and the numbers of coloured people in the country (Olusoga, 2016).
After this, the “Commonwealth Immigrants Act” was passed in 1962 and responded to
this huge immigration by suggesting that the new arrivals "should return to their own
countries"5. This act made it more difficult for new immigrants to settle in the UK, since
it asked for a job before they arrived. Yet, in 1965 the injustice has reached a point that
a new “British Nationality Act 1965” was adopted (ibid.). This last act in our opinion
revealed two different faces of the ongoing situation. On the one hand, the
encouragement of new waves of immigrants from other territories and colonies of
Great Britain (see also refugees from Kenya and Uganda and immigrants from this
falling Empire, people from African colonies and independent Pakistan and India
coming to UK), but on the other, these immigrants and their settlement in the UK
provoked another wave of mere injustice and racism (see Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of
Blood” speech demanding tight controls of the immigrants after the passing of the
“1968 Commonwealth Immigrants Act”; Powell, 1969). Finally, in 1972, with the
passing of the “Immigration Act”, UK accepted only holders of work permits and people
with parents or grandparents born in the UK could gain entry.
To sum up, that this period is full of national movements and migration for Great Britain
but also discrimination and racism against these newly arrived British subjects. This
discrimination provoked lots of marches and riots from both sides and gave to some of
UK’s people the feeling of fear and hatred for the different. However, on the brighter
side, these waves of immigration in the UK from Commonwealth, Africa and India
helped open peoples’ minds in general and made especially major cities such as
London multicultural by promoting a new more cosmopolitan and multicultural style of
life.
5
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1965/feb/09/immigrants-to-unitedkingdom#S5CV0706P0_19650209_HOC_64
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
Finally, in order to better understand this turbulent period in Great Britain’s modern
history, we choose two indicative photos, one of the Empire Windrush ship and the
release of the first immigrants from the Caribbean on the port of UK and another from
a later arrival of immigrants in UK.
Source: https://www.bedfordindependent.co.uk/bedford-commemorates-windrush-day/
This photo was taken when the Empire Windrush arrived at Tilbury Docks from the
Caribbean colonies of Great Britain in 1948 and depicts the actual first wave of the
modern immigration in UK. We choose this photo because it illustrates the beginning
of a new era, a new page on the British history showing thousands of lives searching
to find a better future and settle in with a better job, house and life. This generation of
the first immigrants coming to the UK was called after the name of this ship, known
until now as the “Windrush generation”.
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Elpida SKLIKA : STUDIES IN BRITISH CIVILISATION
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/sep/14/scale-misery-devastating-inside-storyreporting-windrush-scandal
This photo was chosen on the grounds of the same historical period, the arrival of
immigrants from the Caribbean in the UK but in 1962. We can see mothers with their
daughters holding their small baskets, bags and belongings arriving at the Begona
liner, while holding the handrail that leads to their new “promised land”. We also see
men following these women and some officers and staff from the ship helping them
disembark peacefully. In the close-up of this black-and-white photo, we find faces that
seemed happy and that were probably full of hope and impatience to discover their
new homes.
References
The presentation of the references is presented in the American Psychological
Association (APA) style.
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Chassaigne, P. (2015). Histoire de l'Angleterre : des origines à nos jours. Flammarion,
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Despotopoulou, A. (2015). Women and the Railway, 1850-1915. Edinburgh University
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Wolmar, C. (2017/6/13b). How Britain’s Colonial Railways Transformed India.
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