The Colonial Empire of Great Britain the East Indian Group Considered Chiefly

Cover The Colonial Empire of Great Britain the East Indian Group Considered Chiefly
The Colonial Empire of Great Britain the East Indian Group Considered Chiefly
G George Rowe
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6d a ton. The population has increased from 9300 in 1848, to 56, 900 in 1856. And where there was formerly only a jungle tenanted by elephants, tigers, and other wild animals, there are now plantations of coffee and Cinchona, and fields of wheat and potatoes. All Euro- pean vegetables thrive, and apples and pears improve by the transplantation. Both barley and hops are grown, and excellent beer is brewed from them. South-Down mutton comes to perfection, and the Englishman rejoices at once in go...od meat, and an appetite to relish it. Tea has been tried at Coonoor with success ; though it does not thrive so decidedly as coffee, the cultivation of which, above 4000 * Report of Insp. -Gen. Of Hospitals in India. Pub. In ' Madras Spec. , ' Feb. 8, 1859.
t Mr. G. H. Fen wick, an engineer on the Madras and Beypore Rail- road, makes all these heights 1000 feet greater. See his evidence.
THE DECCAN AND ITS DEPENDENCIES. 109 feet, is said to pay 100 per cent, on the outlay. Some difficulty is experienced from want of labour, but here, as elsewhere in India, it is questionable whether an ex- ceedingly low rate of wages has not been offered.


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