Wednesday, June 06, 2018

Phosphate Mining in Anguilla



The story begins millions of years ago when bats and sea birds came to nest in the naturally formed caves.  Over centuries, the level of guano, or bat or bird droppings, in the bottoms of these caves built up to a great height, nearly filling the cavities.  Then, as the Caribbean tectonic plate was dragged down under sea-level with the sinking Atlantic plate upon which it rested, the guano would be drowned in sea water.  Over a period of millions of years, this happened repeatedly.  Anguilla and Sombrero were sometimes above sea level for millions of years, and then it is estimated up to 10,000 feet under water for millions more years.  This process converted the fresh guano into a crystalline form which chemists call phosphate.
In 1814 and again in 1825, British geologists surveyed Sombrero and found that it abounded in guano.  In the 1840s, guano came to be prized in the industrial world as a source of saltpetre for gunpowder as well as an agricultural fertilizer.  The US began importing it in 1843.  By the 1850s the UK was importing over 200,000 tons a year while US imports totalled about 750,000 tons.
The international competition for guano resulted in the ‘guano mania’ of the 1850s, and increasing prices for the product.  In 1856 the US Congress enacted the ‘Guano Islands Act’. This Act enabled US citizens to take possession of unclaimed islands containing guano in the name of the United States, and empowered the president to send in armed military to intervene in the case of any dispute.  This encouraged US entrepreneurs to search for and exploit newly found deposits on tiny islands and reefs in the Caribbean and elsewhere.
This industry reached Anguilla and Sombrero in the 1850s and became important throughout the 1860s and 1870s.[1]  At an unknown date, probably in the early 1850s, a US mining enterprise, Messrs Copeland and Gowen, occupied Sombrero and in a short time quarried as they claimed over 100,000 thousand tons of guano.
The ships unloaded their Anguillian cargo in Baton Rouge at the mouth of the Mississippi River, from where it was placed in sacks and barged up-river.  The sacks of Anguilla and Sombrero guano were then loaded onto wagons and distributed to corn farmers through the mid-western United States.  We can justifiably say that the American prairies were, in the years before the American Civil War of 1861-1865, opened up to corn or maize agriculture fertilized with the guano of Anguilla.[2]
In the year 1856, after the passage of the Guano Islands Act permitted them to do so, Messrs Copeland and Gowen filed a claim to Sombrero Island on behalf of the United States with the State Department.  They alleged that they had employed a Captain Meltiah Jordan Jr to go on a voyage of discovery and that he had on one of those trips discovered guano deposits on Sombrero and had brought back a sample.  They had dispatched a second vessel commanded by Captain John Jordan, with instructions to take and retain possession of the island, which was done.  However, due to technicalities with the filed affidavits, the claim was not considered sufficient to warrant recognition of Gowen and Copeland’s claim.
The following year 1857, the mining firm of Wood and Grant acquired the interests of Copeland and Gowen.  In spite of their claim not being recognised, they occupied the island and removed guano.  As the US Civil War broke out, one of the previous owners, a Mr AC Elliott of Maryland, threatened to take possession of Sombrero by force, and make use of it for the Confederacy, or possibly for the slave trade.  By this time Wood and Grant had 45 labourers on the island, and they asked for protection against expeditions by the Confederates.  As a result, the Secretary of State wrote to the Secretary of the Navy remarking on the vital importance during the Civil War of the guano island of Sombrero belonging to the United States and the necessity of its protection by the Navy.  Mr Elliott does not seem to have proceeded with his claim, and Wood and Grant remained in possession of Sombrero.
In 1859, Mr Sawkins, the government geologist in Jamaica, was sent to Anguilla and Sombrero where he identified large deposits of phosphate.[3]  This would not have been difficult to do, since the Americans had been mining the mineral there for some years.  The supply of fresh guano having been exhausted, the American miners were now blasting the phosphate with dynamite from quarries.  The resulting chunks of the mineral were ground up by a steam-powered mill, and the resulting rubble slid down a chute to the holds of waiting ships tied up below the cliff.  So, the presence of phosphates would have been obvious to Mr Sawkins.
The following year, in August 1860, the West Indian workers on Sombrero revolted against the “slavery proclivities” of Mr Snow, a white US Superintendent, who did not know how to behave in the presence of free wage-earning men.  Four of the two hundred workers fatally injured Superintendent Snow and took over the island and the company’s money and stores.
By this time, the US occupation and exploitation of Sombrero’s mineral resources was attracting the attention of the British colonial authorities.  In 1863, Sombrero was the subject of diplomatic correspondence.  Wood, who was still occupying Sombrero, wrote the US Secretary of State complaining that the British Frigate PHAETON, Commanded by Captain Latham, had visited Sombrero on March 18, 1863 and forced the Americans on the island to haul down the American flag.  Captain Latham subsequently permitted the American occupants to put the flag up again, at the same time claiming they had no right to do so.  Wood & Sons claimed to have been in continuous, peaceful possession since December 1, 1856.  They admitted that they had not secured a proclamation of American sovereignty over the island under the Guano Islands Act, but several hundred tons of 75-80% pure phosphate still remained to be exploited.  They explained that since the blockade of the Southern Confederate Ports in 1861, they had shipped Sombrero’s phosphates almost entirely to England.  They were not interested in making any claim to the island, only to being allowed to remove and sell the phosphate.  Charles Francis Adams, the US Ambassador to the UK, negotiated with Lord Russell of the British Foreign office, as a result of which the Americans were offered a five year lease for the removal of phosphate, with a proviso that any United States claim to sovereignty over Sombrero was not prejudiced.  The US Secretary of State agreed to this arrangement, but the US never subsequently claimed any right to sovereignty over Sombrero.
At the height of mining activities on the island, a steam-powered engine pulled the waggons from the quarries or pits to the derrick which lowered their contents of phosphate to the boats waiting below.  The engine may also have been used to grind up the lumps of phosphate that were stored alongside the engine house awaiting the arrival of ships to take it away.  The rusting remains of the boiler can still be seen near the ruins of the engine house at the landing place on Sombrero.


1. Sombrero, circa 1864, crowded with phosphate ships
British interest in Sombrero was stirred by the need for a lighthouse to mark the Anegada Passage, the safest point of entry to the Caribbean Sea from the north.  The island lay directly in the route of shipping from England to South and Central America in an area with many shipping hazards.  From as early as 1848 the Admiralty was asked by shipping interests to install a light on it.  With the wreck in 1859 on Horseshoe Reef on Anegada of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company’s ship PARAMATTA on her maiden voyage, requests to the Admiralty mounted.  The lighthouse was then built and it first showed its light on the evening of 1 January 1868.
From the early 1870s until 1885, a Cornish mining engineer, Thomas Corfield, was Superintendent of Sombrero.  His duties included organising the conveying of the phosphate to a spot which was convenient for loading the lighters to take the mineral to the ships lying off the island.  He supervised the construction of derricks and engine houses, and arranged the laying of the tram lines for the railway wagons which were loaded at the quarries.  The phosphate was piled in dumps near the engine houses and derricks.
2. Superintendent Corfield’s cottage on Sombrero, ca 1880
Workers were recruited mainly from St Maarten and Anguilla.  They lived in wooden huts during their term of service.  The Superintendent’s house was a wooden bungalow near the middle of the island, and the quarters of the technicians, store keepers and lighthouse keepers and other wooden buildings were grouped around it.  Stores and various supplies were obtained as needed from a Mr Nesbit, a Philipsburg merchant.  The company’s schooner LOGOS brought supplies from St Maarten and also took the labourers to and from their homes.
In 1871 the lease of the island was sold for £55,000 to a French banker in London, Baron Erlanger, and then sold again by him to the New Sombrero Phosphate Company for £110,000.  This transaction gave rise to ground breaking litigation in the famous case of Baron Erlanger v New Sombrero Phosphate Co (1878) App Cas 1218Erlanger, a French banker, purchased the balance of the lease of Sombrero Island which had been mined for many years previously for its phosphates by Mr Wood & Co.  He then floated the New Sombrero Company in the City of London, and issued a prospectus inviting purchasers to invest in it.  A large number of shares were sold.  Erlanger did not disclose in the prospectus that he was about to make a huge profit by selling the lease he had purchased to the company.  After three years of hearing nothing, the investors sent a detective to Anguilla and Sombrero to investigate.  He reported back that Sombrero was abandoned except for the lighthouse and that all the phosphate ore had been mined by the Americans.  The investors tracked down Erlanger and sued him.
It was held by the House of Lords, Britain’s final court of appeal at that time, that the promoters of a company are in a fiduciary relationship with investors.  They are obliged to put in the company prospectus the full details of any contract they have with the company they are promoting.  Erlanger, who had concealed the 100% profit he was going to make from the sale of the lease to the company, was found to have defrauded the investors.  The court ordered rescission of the contracts to purchase the shares, meaning that the contracts were set aside and the purchase price ordered to be repaid to the investors.  This case is the foundation of the company law doctrine that when promoters start up a company, if any one of them has any contract with the company, full disclosure must be made in the prospectus, or the investors will be able to have the prospectus declared by a court to be a fraud, and they can get their money back with damages.  This is a leading case in Caribbean, British, Canadian, and even United States company law.  By 1890 the phosphate works on Sombrero were completely abandoned, and no further effort was ever made to mine the island again.
Everyone in Anguilla has heard of the Gavannah Cave, sometimes pronounced Cavannah.  It lies on Rev John A Gumbs’ land in the Katouche Valley.  It is not a cave at all.  It is a mine.  A cave is a natural cavity in the land.  A mine is a man-made cavity, dug to remove minerals from below the ground.  The Gavannah Cave was dug by American miners during the 1870s when Anguilla’s mining industry was at its height.  It is not a very deep mine.  The main shaft is no more than 100 feet long, and lies just below the surface.
3. Gavannah Cave, after DA McFarlane and RDE MacPhee
There is a chimney or opening halfway down the tunnel.  Outside of the chimney there are mounds of large boulders and rubble, which indicates that there must have been a large winch above the opening which permitted the miners to remove the results of their dynamiting that way.
There is a short branch tunnel to the left after you enter the main tunnel, with a short shaft about 10 feet deep at the end of the branch tunnel.  There is 20 ft deep shaft at the end of the main tunnel.  When you climb down this shaft you find yourself in a sort of hub of two or three short tunnels, no more than 10 feet long, going off in different directions like the spokes of a bicycle wheel.  They appear to be exploratory tunnels that the miners dug in an effort to find more phosphate, as the mine came to the end of its productive life.  In those early days, miners did not know that phosphate was fossilised bat or seabird guano.  They may have thought that, like mining for gold or tin, if they struck out underground from a successful vein of mineral they might find more veins waiting to be discovered.  It was only many years later, when geologists discovered the great age of the earth and the many changes that it had gone through in the millennia of the past, that chemists were able to explain how phosphate came to be made.
We do not know at present who owned the land in the 1870s on which the Gavannah Mine was dug.  There are no leases or legal documents in the Anguilla Archives to give us this information.[4]  We can only hope that, whoever the Anguillian owners were, they made their fortune after decades of grinding poverty trying to make the poor soil of the Katouche Valley produce beef and goat-meat.
The Anguillian owners would not have been able to authorise the mining of phosphate on their land.  In the Leeward Islands the mineral rights in private land has long been vested in or owned by the Crown or government.  Only the Crown could grant a licence to dig for minerals in privately owned land.  The landowner could at most lease the bare land for the purpose of working it as a mine.  Was the Cavannah a legal mine, where the government of St Kitts received royalties from the mining while the Anguillian landowner received rents for the lease?  We do not know.  Very likely, it was an illegal mine, privately arranged between the Anguillian landowner and the American miners.[5]
We know that in his 1768 Will Governor Gumbs left the Katouche Bay Estate to his two daughters, Anne Warner and Katherine Payne.  It was then spelled Cadeaux Bay Estate.  To one he left the south bank of the valley and to the other he left the north.  Cadeaux is the French word for “gifts”, as in the plural of gift.  They shared the small sugar factory on the south slope half way between the Estate Well and the beach.  The ruins of the Boiling house can still be seen if you know where to look.  All sign of the Curing House and the Animal Round where the canes were crushed have disappeared in the intervening years.  The name Katouche has evolved from the original name Cadeaux.  The Anguillian English speakers did not know the correct way to pronounce the French word.  The pronounced it phonetically as “cadeuse”.  It began to be spelled in the deeds “Cuttous” or “Catouche” with a “C”.  Eventually the “C” was replaced with a “K” and we get the present spelling.
The Gavannah Cave was not the only phosphate mine in Anguilla.  Also bearing evidence of extensive phosphate mining is the Little Bay Phosphate Cave which can be seen on the eastern flank of Little Bay.  But, we know nothing of the working of the Little Bay Phosphate Cave.  Like the Gavannah Cave, it must have been informally leased and mined.
Palaeontology work began in the north-eastern area of the Caribbean in the mid-nineteenth century, when phosphate mining boomed in the region and fossils were coincidentally found in associated strata.  In the year 1868, Henry Waters & Brothers, manufacturers of phosphate fertilisers in the City of Philadelphia, received a shipment of cave earth from Anguilla.  The shipment was sent for the purpose of having the Philadelphia Academy of Sciences estimate the potential industrial value of the phosphate specimens included in the earth.  Henry Waters noticed the presence of fossil bones in his shipment, and promptly brought them to the attention of Edward Drinker Cope, an eminent palaeontologist.  Cope was at the time the Secretary of the Academy.  Cope recognised the fossil bones as coming from a rodent of phenomenal size.  He named the extinct animal that produced the fossils, Amblyrhiza inundata.[6]  The generic or first part of the name roughly translates as “strange root” reflecting Cope’s inability to conceive where such a strange beast could have come from.  The second or specific part of the name reflects Cope’s belief that the animal must have lived on an area of land that was now under the sea.  In that he is right, since Anguilla was in pre-historic times, when the sea level was hundreds of feet lower than it now is, part of a giant island named by geologists “Anguillea” and incorporating Anguilla, St Martin and St Barths.  Sea levels having risen 35 meters the higher parts of Anguillea are now separate islands surrounded by the sea.
They were dug from an unknown phosphate mine on Anguilla, probably the Gavannah Cave.  Fossil remains of Amblyrhiza have also been identified in St Maarten, and it is now defined as an extinct species of giant marsupial that is estimated to have weighed between 50 and 200 kg.  The extinct animal now also goes by the name the Blunt Toothed Giant Hutia.
4. Amblyrhiza inundata (reconstruction)
The fossils that were shipped to Professor Cope were accompanied by an Amerindian carved conch chisel.  The sciences of geology and biology were not as advanced in Professor Cope's time as they are now.  He thought it possible that the Amblyrhiza remains were associated with that of early man.  It is now known that the Giant Hutia pre-date the entry of man into Anguilla by many thousands of years.  The Amblyrhiza remains have been carbon dated to 125,000 years, while the earliest humans are not thought likely to have entered the Americas more than 30,000 years ago, showing that Amblyrhiza lived long before humans entered the American Continent from Asia.
We can hope that, one day in the future, some enterprising Anguillian student in a doctoral programme, perhaps preparing a thesis on the phosphate industry of Anguilla, will locate Anguilla’s archives in St Kitts, hopefully containing copies of the leases, if any, made to the American prospectors who worked the phosphates of Anguilla.  The mining company records may still be preserved in Philadelphia, and study of them may reveal details of the social life of the Anguillians of the 1850s to 1890s, as well, perhaps, as the engineering plans and designs for the works on Sombrero.  In London, among the Colonial Office records at Kew Gardens and elsewhere, will be found the correspondence and agreements relating to the licences granted to the original Sombrero Phosphate Company and the New Sombrero Phosphate Company.  These records will all prove useful in telling us something about the life and social conditions of the Anguillians of the mid- to late-nineteenth century.



[1]       As an aside, when speaking or writing about Sombrero, it is worth remembering that until as recently as 1951 Sombrero was attached to the British Virgin Islands, and was not a part of Anguilla as it is now.  In 1951 it was detached from Tortola and added to the colony of St Kitts and Nevis.  This was principally because the lighthouse on Sombrero had for many years been provisioned by the Schooner Warspite of Anguilla, which sourced the needed fuel for the lighthouse and provisions for the lighthouse men in the commercial outlets of Basseterre.  The lighthouse men came mainly from Anguilla, then a possession of St Kitts.  It must have seemed more convenient to the colonial authorities to have the island of Sombrero placed under the control of the government and legislature of St Kitts, which had more of an administrative connection with Sombrero than the government in Tortola.  In the 1982 Anguilla Constitution, as a result of negotiations between the British, St Kitts-Nevis, and Anguilla governments, Sombrero was for the first time detached from St Kitts and formally added to the territory of Anguilla.  As a result, we are entitled to treat the history of Sombrero as a part of the history of Anguilla.
[2]       The soil of the prairies needs fertilizer to be able to grow any crops since it consists of millions of acres of ancient sand dunes that formed from the bottom of the ancient sea that once occupied all of the central plains of the US.  Sand is notoriously lacking in nutrients and is only fertile when fertilizer is added to it.
[3]       CO 239/104 - No 122. Dispatch of Governor Hamilton of 8 October 1860 to Secretary of State Newcastle concerning his detention in St Kitts of Mr Sawkins to do a survey of St Kitts, he having completed his survey of the probable value of phosphate of lime in Anguilla.  I have searched for a copy of the survey in the colonial records at Kew Gardens, but have not been able to locate one.
[4]       There may be some in the St Kitts Archives of Anguilla, which will in due course shed light on the commercial dealings that surrounded this excavation.
[5]       We will only know the truth when we get to see the Anguilla Archives for the 1860s and 1870, presently being held for us in the St Kitts Archives in Basseterre.  The St Kitts authorities have generously agreed to hold our Archives for us until such time as we construct a suitable building to hold the fragile and crumbling documents.  To bring them to Anguilla, and store them in an un-air-conditioned and insect-riddled room would be stupid of us.