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Apcar and Company

Apcar and Company was a firm founded in 1819 in India that engaged in shipping, import and export. The most profitable trade was in opium, shipped from India to Hong Kong and the Pearl River. The Apcar Line also carried Indian and Chinese laborers for work in Malaya and Singapore. The line was sold to the British India Steam Navigation Company in 1912.

Apcar and Company
IndustryShipping
FoundedBombay, India (1819 (1819))
FounderArratoon Apcar
DefunctJanuary 27, 1912 (1912-01-27)
FatePurchased by the British-India Steam Navigation Company
Headquarters,
India
Area served
India, Southeast Asia, Far Easy

Origins edit

Arratoon Apcar was an ethnic Armenian born in 1779 at New Julfa in Isfahan, Persia. He was the second son of Apcar, the ancestor of the family. He came to Bombay when he was sixteen and found employment with an Armenian merchant there, trading with China and Manila. After his patron died, he continued in this trade in his own right.[1] His brother Gregory Apcar came to India in 1808 and joined Arratoon in Bombay.[2] The trading company of Apcar & Co. was founded in 1819 by Arratoon Apcar.[3]

Growth edit

Arratoon Apcar moved his company to Calcutta around the end of 1830.[4] In Calcutta the company moved into shipping, carrying both passengers and freight. The most profitable cargo was opium.[5] Until P&O began shipping opium from Calcutta in 1851, the trade was divided between Jardine, Skinner and the Apcar Line. Even then, P&O had limited shipping capacity.[6] While Jardines carried opium for the larger suppliers, the Apcars with their Arratoon Apcar and Catherine Apcar sailing boats catered to many smaller local dealers. With slower boats, they charged much lower rates than Jardine Skinner, ranging from Rs8 to Rs10 per chest compared to upward of Rs28 per chest charged by Jardine Skinner. However, the Apcars may have had private arrangements with the dealers that locked them into using Apcar services.[7]

The Apcar Line's fleet became well-respected, efficiently carrying both cargo and Chinese coolies, mostly between Singapore, Hong Kong and Amoy, but also making regular voyages to Japan.[8] From 1855 Apcar & Co. started to convert their fleet to steam.[7] The Apcar Line was providing regular service to Singapore from 1856.[9] The Apcar clippers dominated the opium trade until the 1870s, carrying their cargoes from Bombay or Calcutta, with a stop in Singapore, on to Hong Kong or the Canton River. 43 voyages of opium ships to China were listed in 1865, of which 17 were Apcar ships.[5] The Apcars and Jardine Skinner exported opium to Singapore for use by the Chinese in the Malay Peninsula or for distribution to other locations in southeast Asia.[10] Eventually the Apcars were forced out of the Dutch East Indies by protectionist measures.[11] Between 1875 and 1880 Captain Chapman James Clare (1853-1940) served on Apcar & Co. opium steamers trading between Hong Kong and Calcutta.[12]

In the 1880s the Apcar Line was sailing monthly from Calcutta to Hong Kong via Penang and Singapore.[5] On 22 May 1888 the steamship Arratoon Apcar collided with the steamship Hebe in the Strait of Malacca, with both ships suffering considerable damage.[13] Both vessels were held to have been at fault.[14] In 1901 the firm of David Sassoon, Sons & Co. were still the agents in Hong Kong of the Apcar Line.[15] They maintained this agency after the purchase of the Apcar Line by the British India Steam Navigation Company.[16]

Family interests edit

In 1843 Arratoon Apcar founded the Armenian Patriotic School in his home town of New Julfa in Isfahan, Persia. The school was entirely funded by Apcar & Co.[17] The Apcars also owned collieries.[4]Sitarampur Colliery was opened by Apcar & Company around 1846.[18] In 1865 Apcar was working a seam of coal 13 feet (4.0 m) deep near Charanpur.[19] They had another mine at Sitarampur, a seam said to be 12 feet (3.7 m) deep and excellent in quality.[20]

Gregory Apcar worked for Apcar & Co. until his death on 23 June 1847 at the age of 52.[2] Arratoon Apcar died on 16 May 1863 at the age of 85.[17]Apcar Alexander Apcar (1850-1913), grandson of Arratoon Apcar, became head of the family firm after the death of his three elder brothers, Apcar, Seth and Thomas.[21] He continued the family trading business, living at their home in Russell Street, where he entertained many people.[22] He was vice-president of the Bengal Chamber of Commerce in 1903, and its president from 1904 to 1907. He represented the Chamber of Commerce in the Viceregal Legislative Council from 1900 to 1909, in the Bengal Legislative Council and in the Port Trust. In 1903 he was made a Companion of the Order of the Star of India (C.S.I.), and later that year was knighted at a Royal Durbar in Delhi.[23]

On 27 February 1912 Apcar & Co, ships, workshops and mines, were sold to the British-India Steam Navigation Company for Rs 800,000.[citation needed]

Fleet edit

 
S.S. Catherine Apcar (1893)

The Arratoon Apcar, a 275-ton brig, began making regular voyages in the mid-1840s between Calcutta, Penang, Singapore and China, taking about two months each way. After a few years the company added the Ararat and the 400-ton Catherine Apcar, which was named after the wife of Arratoon Apcar.[5] In 1846 Apcar and Company had three of the eleven tugs operating at Calcutta, one of 120 hp and two of 150 hp.[24] The first steam clippers added to the fleet were the 315-ton (673 grt) Lightning in 1855 and 593-ton (947 grt) Thunder.[7] These were followed by the 938-ton Arratoon Apcar and the Armenia in 1858. In 1861 the 204-ton Thunder, a screw-driven steam ship, made the journey from Hong Kong to Singapore in just five days.[5] A great cyclone hit Calcutta on 4 October 1864.[25] It caused great damage to the shipping in the harbor. Apcar & Co.'s Thunder was driven onto the Strand at the foot of Hastings Street.[26]

SS Arratoon Apcar was an iron-hulled steamship with a 1,480 ton displacement built in Renfrew, Scotland, 1861. She was sold in 1872 to H.F. Swan Company.[27]

 
Passenger Steamers Hindostan and China, by Thomas Goldsworthy Dutton

The 1019-ton steam ship Catherine Apcar was built in 1865, and soon after the 1476-ton Hindustan and 1471-ton China were added. The Japan was commissioned in 1872. In 1873 the 2153-ton Arratoon Apcar was built. In 1891 the Apcar Line acquired the new 3,250-ton steam ship Lightning. Cabin passengers were accommodated in the poop. The ship carried Indian and Chinese laborers to Singapore and Penang as deck passengers. In July 1893 the Japan was retired, replaced by the 2,715-ton Catherine Apcar.[5]

The Hyson passenger/cargo liner, built in Belfast and launched in 1895, was purchased by the Apcars and renamed Arratoon Apcar in 1899. She was taken over by the British-India Steam Navigation Company in 1912 when they purchased the Apcar Line, retaining her name. Eventually she was demolished in 1932.[28] The 4,563-ton Gregory Apcar joined the fleet in 1902, and the new Japan in 1906.[5] Until well into the 20th century the ships had to be prepared for attack by Chinese pirates, and were armed and sandbagged for defense.[8]

Citations edit

Sources edit

  • (PDF). P&O Heritage. November 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-05. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  • "Arratoon Apcar". National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  • Blake, George (1956). B.I. Centenary - 1856 : 1956). Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Blumi, Isa (2013-09-12). Ottoman Refugees, 1878-1939: Migration in a Post-Imperial World. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-4725-1538-4. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Campo, Joseph Norbert Frans Marie à (2002). Engines of Empire: Steamshipping and State Formation in Colonial Indonesia. Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN 978-90-6550-738-9. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Chakrabarti, Prabhas Kumar (1989-01-01). Coal Industry in West Bengal. Northern Book Centre. ISBN 978-81-85119-61-8. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • . Armenian Cultural Foundation. Archived from the original on 2013-11-01. Retrieved 2014-11-05.
  • Faure, David (1997-09-01). Society: A Documentary History of Hong Kong. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 978-962-209-393-5. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Geological Survey (1865). Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India. Governor-General of India. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Hamashita, Takeshi (2013-05-13). China, East Asia and the Global Economy: Regional and Historical Perspectives. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-134-04028-5. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Harcourt, Freda (2006-09-05). Flagships of Imperialism: The P & O Company and the Politics of Empire from Its Origins to 1867. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-84779-145-0. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Kling, Blair B. (1976). Partner in Empire: Dwarkanath Tagore and the Age of Enterprise in Eastern India. University of California Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-520-02927-9. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • "Late Sir A. A. Apcar". The Straits Times: 9. 30 April 1913. Retrieved 2013-11-03.
  • Massey, Montague (1918). Recollections of Calcutta for over half a century. NuVision Publications, LLC. ISBN 978-1-61536-102-1. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Munro, J. Forbes (2003). Maritime Enterprise and Empire: Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network, 1823-93. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-935-5. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • "Obituary Sir A.A. Apcar". The Times. 1913. Retrieved 2013-11-03.
  • Seth, Mesrovb Jacob (1937). Armenians in India, from the Earliest Times to the Present Day: A Work of Original Research. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 978-81-206-0812-2. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Seth, Mesrovb J. (2004-01-01). History of the Armenians in India. Gorgias Press LLC. ISBN 978-1-59333-049-1. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  • "The Arratoon Apcar", The Weekly Reporter, Wildy & Sons, 1890, retrieved 2013-11-04
  • Wright, Nadia (2 July 2002). "Some notes on the Apcar Line". Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  • Zwillenberg, H.J. (1981). "Clare, Chapman James (1853–1940)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 8. MUP. Retrieved 2013-11-05.

apcar, company, firm, founded, 1819, india, that, engaged, shipping, import, export, most, profitable, trade, opium, shipped, from, india, hong, kong, pearl, river, apcar, line, also, carried, indian, chinese, laborers, work, malaya, singapore, line, sold, bri. Apcar and Company was a firm founded in 1819 in India that engaged in shipping import and export The most profitable trade was in opium shipped from India to Hong Kong and the Pearl River The Apcar Line also carried Indian and Chinese laborers for work in Malaya and Singapore The line was sold to the British India Steam Navigation Company in 1912 Apcar and CompanyIndustryShippingFoundedBombay India 1819 1819 FounderArratoon ApcarDefunctJanuary 27 1912 1912 01 27 FatePurchased by the British India Steam Navigation CompanyHeadquartersCalcutta IndiaArea servedIndia Southeast Asia Far Easy Contents 1 Origins 2 Growth 3 Family interests 4 Fleet 5 Citations 6 SourcesOrigins editMain article Apcar family Arratoon Apcar was an ethnic Armenian born in 1779 at New Julfa in Isfahan Persia He was the second son of Apcar the ancestor of the family He came to Bombay when he was sixteen and found employment with an Armenian merchant there trading with China and Manila After his patron died he continued in this trade in his own right 1 His brother Gregory Apcar came to India in 1808 and joined Arratoon in Bombay 2 The trading company of Apcar amp Co was founded in 1819 by Arratoon Apcar 3 Growth editArratoon Apcar moved his company to Calcutta around the end of 1830 4 In Calcutta the company moved into shipping carrying both passengers and freight The most profitable cargo was opium 5 Until P amp O began shipping opium from Calcutta in 1851 the trade was divided between Jardine Skinner and the Apcar Line Even then P amp O had limited shipping capacity 6 While Jardines carried opium for the larger suppliers the Apcars with their Arratoon Apcar and Catherine Apcar sailing boats catered to many smaller local dealers With slower boats they charged much lower rates than Jardine Skinner ranging from Rs8 to Rs10 per chest compared to upward of Rs28 per chest charged by Jardine Skinner However the Apcars may have had private arrangements with the dealers that locked them into using Apcar services 7 The Apcar Line s fleet became well respected efficiently carrying both cargo and Chinese coolies mostly between Singapore Hong Kong and Amoy but also making regular voyages to Japan 8 From 1855 Apcar amp Co started to convert their fleet to steam 7 The Apcar Line was providing regular service to Singapore from 1856 9 The Apcar clippers dominated the opium trade until the 1870s carrying their cargoes from Bombay or Calcutta with a stop in Singapore on to Hong Kong or the Canton River 43 voyages of opium ships to China were listed in 1865 of which 17 were Apcar ships 5 The Apcars and Jardine Skinner exported opium to Singapore for use by the Chinese in the Malay Peninsula or for distribution to other locations in southeast Asia 10 Eventually the Apcars were forced out of the Dutch East Indies by protectionist measures 11 Between 1875 and 1880 Captain Chapman James Clare 1853 1940 served on Apcar amp Co opium steamers trading between Hong Kong and Calcutta 12 In the 1880s the Apcar Line was sailing monthly from Calcutta to Hong Kong via Penang and Singapore 5 On 22 May 1888 the steamship Arratoon Apcar collided with the steamship Hebe in the Strait of Malacca with both ships suffering considerable damage 13 Both vessels were held to have been at fault 14 In 1901 the firm of David Sassoon Sons amp Co were still the agents in Hong Kong of the Apcar Line 15 They maintained this agency after the purchase of the Apcar Line by the British India Steam Navigation Company 16 Family interests editIn 1843 Arratoon Apcar founded the Armenian Patriotic School in his home town of New Julfa in Isfahan Persia The school was entirely funded by Apcar amp Co 17 The Apcars also owned collieries 4 Sitarampur Colliery was opened by Apcar amp Company around 1846 18 In 1865 Apcar was working a seam of coal 13 feet 4 0 m deep near Charanpur 19 They had another mine at Sitarampur a seam said to be 12 feet 3 7 m deep and excellent in quality 20 Gregory Apcar worked for Apcar amp Co until his death on 23 June 1847 at the age of 52 2 Arratoon Apcar died on 16 May 1863 at the age of 85 17 Apcar Alexander Apcar 1850 1913 grandson of Arratoon Apcar became head of the family firm after the death of his three elder brothers Apcar Seth and Thomas 21 He continued the family trading business living at their home in Russell Street where he entertained many people 22 He was vice president of the Bengal Chamber of Commerce in 1903 and its president from 1904 to 1907 He represented the Chamber of Commerce in the Viceregal Legislative Council from 1900 to 1909 in the Bengal Legislative Council and in the Port Trust In 1903 he was made a Companion of the Order of the Star of India C S I and later that year was knighted at a Royal Durbar in Delhi 23 On 27 February 1912 Apcar amp Co ships workshops and mines were sold to the British India Steam Navigation Company for Rs 800 000 citation needed Fleet edit nbsp S S Catherine Apcar 1893 The Arratoon Apcar a 275 ton brig began making regular voyages in the mid 1840s between Calcutta Penang Singapore and China taking about two months each way After a few years the company added the Ararat and the 400 ton Catherine Apcar which was named after the wife of Arratoon Apcar 5 In 1846 Apcar and Company had three of the eleven tugs operating at Calcutta one of 120 hp and two of 150 hp 24 The first steam clippers added to the fleet were the 315 ton 673 grt Lightning in 1855 and 593 ton 947 grt Thunder 7 These were followed by the 938 ton Arratoon Apcar and the Armenia in 1858 In 1861 the 204 ton Thunder a screw driven steam ship made the journey from Hong Kong to Singapore in just five days 5 A great cyclone hit Calcutta on 4 October 1864 25 It caused great damage to the shipping in the harbor Apcar amp Co s Thunder was driven onto the Strand at the foot of Hastings Street 26 SS Arratoon Apcar was an iron hulled steamship with a 1 480 ton displacement built in Renfrew Scotland 1861 She was sold in 1872 to H F Swan Company 27 nbsp Passenger Steamers Hindostan and China by Thomas Goldsworthy DuttonThe 1019 ton steam ship Catherine Apcar was built in 1865 and soon after the 1476 ton Hindustan and 1471 ton China were added The Japan was commissioned in 1872 In 1873 the 2153 ton Arratoon Apcar was built In 1891 the Apcar Line acquired the new 3 250 ton steam ship Lightning Cabin passengers were accommodated in the poop The ship carried Indian and Chinese laborers to Singapore and Penang as deck passengers In July 1893 the Japan was retired replaced by the 2 715 ton Catherine Apcar 5 The Hyson passenger cargo liner built in Belfast and launched in 1895 was purchased by the Apcars and renamed Arratoon Apcar in 1899 She was taken over by the British India Steam Navigation Company in 1912 when they purchased the Apcar Line retaining her name Eventually she was demolished in 1932 28 The 4 563 ton Gregory Apcar joined the fleet in 1902 and the new Japan in 1906 5 Until well into the 20th century the ships had to be prepared for attack by Chinese pirates and were armed and sandbagged for defense 8 Citations edit Seth 1937 p 126 a b Seth 1937 p 530 Diana A Apcar a b Seth 1937 p 301 a b c d e f g Wright 2002 Harcourt 2006 p 103 a b c Harcourt 2006 p 104 a b Blake 1956 Campo 2002 p 44 Munro 2003 p 58 Blumi 2013 p 107 Zwillenberg 1981 The Arratoon Apcar 1890 p 481 The Arratoon Apcar 1890 p 482 Hamashita 2013 p 194 Faure 1997 p 125 a b Seth 1937 p 529 Chakrabarti 1989 p 3 Geological Survey 1865 p 104 Geological Survey 1865 p 111 Seth 2004 p 127 Late Sir A A Apcar Straits Times Obituary Sir A A Apcar The Times Kling 1976 p 129 Massey 1918 p 29 Massey 1918 p 34 Arratoon Apcar NPS Arratoon Apcar 1896 P amp O Heritage Sources edit Arratoon Apcar 1896 PDF P amp O Heritage November 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 11 05 Retrieved 2013 11 04 Arratoon Apcar National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Retrieved 2013 11 04 Blake George 1956 B I Centenary 1856 1956 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Blumi Isa 2013 09 12 Ottoman Refugees 1878 1939 Migration in a Post Imperial World A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4725 1538 4 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Campo Joseph Norbert Frans Marie a 2002 Engines of Empire Steamshipping and State Formation in Colonial Indonesia Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 978 90 6550 738 9 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Chakrabarti Prabhas Kumar 1989 01 01 Coal Industry in West Bengal Northern Book Centre ISBN 978 81 85119 61 8 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Diana A Apcar 1869 1937 The First Armenian Woman Diplomat Armenian Cultural Foundation Archived from the original on 2013 11 01 Retrieved 2014 11 05 Faure David 1997 09 01 Society A Documentary History of Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 962 209 393 5 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Geological Survey 1865 Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India Governor General of India Retrieved 2013 11 05 Hamashita Takeshi 2013 05 13 China East Asia and the Global Economy Regional and Historical Perspectives Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 134 04028 5 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Harcourt Freda 2006 09 05 Flagships of Imperialism The P amp O Company and the Politics of Empire from Its Origins to 1867 Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 84779 145 0 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Kling Blair B 1976 Partner in Empire Dwarkanath Tagore and the Age of Enterprise in Eastern India University of California Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 520 02927 9 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Late Sir A A Apcar The Straits Times 9 30 April 1913 Retrieved 2013 11 03 Massey Montague 1918 Recollections of Calcutta for over half a century NuVision Publications LLC ISBN 978 1 61536 102 1 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Munro J Forbes 2003 Maritime Enterprise and Empire Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network 1823 93 Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 935 5 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Obituary Sir A A Apcar The Times 1913 Retrieved 2013 11 03 Seth Mesrovb Jacob 1937 Armenians in India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day A Work of Original Research Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 0812 2 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Seth Mesrovb J 2004 01 01 History of the Armenians in India Gorgias Press LLC ISBN 978 1 59333 049 1 Retrieved 2013 11 04 The Arratoon Apcar The Weekly Reporter Wildy amp Sons 1890 retrieved 2013 11 04 Wright Nadia 2 July 2002 Some notes on the Apcar Line Retrieved 2013 11 05 Zwillenberg H J 1981 Clare Chapman James 1853 1940 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 8 MUP Retrieved 2013 11 05 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apcar and Company amp oldid 1196595100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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