One of my favorite tea
artifacts is a copy of THE PENNY MAGAZINE
OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE, published in London
in April 28, 1832. The front page of that edition contains a lengthy essay on
the production of tea in China. Here is a short snippet from that treatise -
It is a commonly received opinion that the distinctive
color of green tea is imparted to it by sheets of copper, upon which it is
dried. For this belief there is not, however, the smallest foundation in fact,
since copper is never used for the purpose. Repeated experiments have been made
to discover, by an unerring test, whether the leaves of green tea contain any
impregnation of copper, but in no case has any trace of this metal been
detected.
The Chinese do not use their tea until it is about a
year old, considering that it is too actively narcotic when new. Tea is yet
older when it is brought into consumption in England, as, in addition to the
length of time occupied in its collection and transport to this country the
East India Company are obliged by their charter to have always a supply sufficient
for one year's consumption in their London warehouse, and this regulation which
enhances the price to the consumer, is said to have been made by way of guarding
in some measure against the inconveniences that would attend any interruption
to a trade entirely dependent upon the caprice of an arbitrary government.
The people of China drink their infusion prepared in
the same manner as we employ, but they do not mix it with either sugar or milk.
All this useful, and sometimes
errant, knowledge of tea was accumulated third or fourth hand, or through the
vivid imagination of the writer because few Westerners had ever observed tea
production up close and personal in China.
It would be another 16 years before the East India Company employed
Edinburgh botanist Robert Fortune to make a dangerous three-year journey, in
disguise, into the tea growing regions of Anhui and the famous Wuyi Mountains
of Fujian. He was the first Anglican to secret tea plants out of China (1847)
for transplant into India.
Fortune's story is one of the
great commercial espionage capers in history - and it has an American
connection. I'll fill you in on that tale in future blogs, or you can read it
in the upcoming expanded edition of The
Social History of Tea by Jane Pettigrew and Bruce Richardson, appearing in
June 2013.


Copper - how interesting! ;-) I wonder what scientific "facts" of today that future generations would look back upon and chuckle (over cups of tea).
ReplyDeleteRather exciting facts, indeed. I would love now to visit some museum dedicated to the tea. Moreover, I found out how many healthful properties it has:
ReplyDeleteHealing tea.
By the way, I followed you up with GFC, it'd be great if you follow me back.