The plan
In 1695 Scottish-born William Paterson thought up a simple but, in theory, brilliant scheme which would remedyScotland’s worst ills. He was a prolific ‘projector’, a promoter of speculative money-making schemes, who hadbeen responsible for the foundation of the Bank of England in 1694. His new plan was that the ScottishParliament, following the passing of An Act for Incourageing Forraign Trade in 1693, should grant a monopoly of trade with Africa and the Indies to a Scottish trading company in a way which would harness the lucrative Far Eastern trade.
A key part of the plan was the establishment of a Scottish colony in Central America, at a place called Darien(now part of Panama), so that merchant ships no longer had to make the long and perilous journey around theCape of Good Hope or Cape Horn. Instead, goods would be transported to the colony on the eastern site of Darien and carried across the narrow isthmus to a port on the western seaboard, where ships with exchangecargoes from the East Indies and Asia would lie waiting.The fact that Paterson had never set eyes on Darien did not deter him. ‘The time and expense of navigation toChina, Japan, the Spice Islands, and the far greatest part of the East Indies will be lessened more than half ... ’,he proclaimed. ‘Trade will increase trade, and money will beget money ... Thus this door to the seas, and thekey of the universe ... will of course enable its proprietors to give laws to both oceans, and to become arbitratorsto the commercial world.’ Many other major European powers were embarking on similar schemes of colonisation at this time as a means to profit from expanding trade.
The preparation
On 26 June 1695 the Scottish Parliament passed an act establishing ‘The Company of Scotland Trading toAfrica and the Indies’. Its capital was to be £600,000 sterling, half to be subscribed in London and half inScotland. English investors soon raised their share, but the powerful directors of the East India Company,fearing that their monopoly would be broken and their business ruined, turned King William and the EnglishParliament against the venture. The King, who was endeavouring to appease Spain, was only too happy tooppose the planting of a Scottish colony on Spanish-claimed territory. The directors of the Company of Scotlandwere threatened with impeachment and English investors quickly withdrew their money.The Scots, enraged by the duplicity of the King and English Parliament and carried along on a tide of nationalpride, determined to raise all the capital alone. By August 1696 the revised target of £400,000 sterling had beensubscribed in Scotland. This was an enormous sum, amounting to about half the country’s available capital. Thecompany’s directors began to lay plans for the colony and in the meantime effectively used the subscribedcapital, of which £34,000 was held in coin, to operate as a bank by making loans and issuing notes. Theseinitiatives were not a success and, indeed, much of the subscribed capital was embezzled and never recovered.
The journey
Meanwhile, ships and provisions were bought, notably in Holland and Germany, including cannon, guns andswords, axes, hammers, nails, clothing and household goods. Crews were recruited and the expedition’s fiveships assembled in the Firth of Forth. With the exception of the former French vessel
Dolphin
, their names -
Caledonia, St Andrew, Unicorn
and
Endeavour
- reflected Scots patriotism and hope. On 18 July 1698 this firstexpedition left the port of Leith with around 1,200 people, including William Paterson, on board. At a time whenthe total Scots population amounted to only about a million souls, the amount of manpower committed to theventure was as staggering as that of money.
In order to protect the company’s interests the location of the colony remained a secret to both the emigrantsand the ships’ crews. Once clear of Madeira, however, sealed orders were opened which revealed the ultimatedestination of the expedition for the first time. They were ‘to proceed to the Bay of Darien, and make the Islecalled the Golden Island ... some few leagues to the leeward of the mouth of the great River of Darien ... andthere make a settlement on the mainland’.
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