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A fascinating botanical true-romanceIn her book, ‘How to see Ceylon’ (1914), Bella Sidney Woolf, sister of Leonard Woolf, relates the story of rubber in Ceylon. “The late Sir Joseph Hooker (at that time the Director of Royal Gardena, Kew) had long tried to procure living seeds of Hevea Braziliensis from the Amazon Valley, but in vain. However, in 1876, Mr. (now Sir) H.A. Wickham was commissioned by Sir Charles Markham to supply seed to the Indian Office. Mr. Wickham secured the valuable seeds, but he would never have got them home had it not been for his power of seizing opportunities. He found an ocean-going steamer abandoned on the Amazon by her supercargoes. He chartered her and brought the seeds in triumph to Kew. Ceylon was chosen as the nursery for the seedlings. They arrived – 7,000 plants – in 39 Wardian cases by the S S Duke of Devonshire in 1876. “From these historic seeds has sprung the whole of the Ceylon rubber industry, as well as a great part of that existing farther East. The monster trees at Henaratgoda today have grown from the original seedlings, and it was from them that the first rubber seeds distributed in the East were derived.” The Studio Times publication ‘Handbook for the Ceylon Traveller’ refers to one of “the most fascinating of botanical true-romances” – the smuggling of the seeds down the Amazon in bales of cotton; the intensive research for the basic technique of exploiting the tree commercially; the development of the various technological uses of the product, including the rubber tyre that made the automobile industry possible. “From these trees came the seeds dispersed throughout South-east Asia to give a dozen countries a financial mainstay, and the economic revolution that sprang from then broke forever the ruthless rule of the South American ‘rubber barons’ and made of their millionaires’ city, Manaos, with its marble pavements and gold-plate WCS, a ghost town.” One of the trees at Henaratgoda Gardens (No. 2) yielded 392 pounds of dry rubber in less than five years at a time when every aspect of growing and ‘tapping’ was still experimental. Tree No. 6 was the first to be planted. |