THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID COFFEE: ITS HISTORY, CULTIVATION, AND USES. BY ROBERT HEWITT, JR. ILLUSTRATED WITH ORIGINAL DESIGNS BY EMINENT AMERICAN ARTISTS, AND A MAP OF THE WORLD SHOWING THE SEVERAL PLACES WHERE COFFEE IS, OR MAY BE PRODUCED, AND WHERE IT IS ALSO USED. NEW YORK: D. APPLETON AKD COMPANY, 549 & 551 BKOADWAY. 1872. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, BY ROBERT HEWITT, JB., In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. Right of translation reserved. TO MERCANTILE ABILITY AND HONORABLE DEALING ENTITLE HIM TO THE FIRST RANK AND POSITION IN THE COFFEE TRADE, This Work is (Respectfully Inscribed BY THE AUTHOM. M358900 CONTENTS. PAQB PREFACE 7 INTRODUCTORY 9 THE HISTORY OF THE COFFEE-PLANT 14 ITS CULTIVATION IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES 38 ARABIA. 42 EAST INDIES 49 SOUTH AMERICA 59 METHODS OF MAKING COFFEE 66 ANALYSIS AND ADULTERATION OF COFFEE 80 TARIFFS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES 94 STATISTICAL TABLES OF COFFEE . . 99 PEEFAOE. THE reader may possibly remember among the charming " Essays of Ella " one entitled " A Dissertation on roast Pig," in which the writer, with true epicurean zest, insists upon its preferred claims. Whether the reader's taste be in exact accord with that of the essayist, it may not be easy to determine; but who can fail of being delighted with his treatment of the subject ? It is with some such feeling of enthusiastic interest that the present volume has been prepared, and in a similar spirit it is now submitted to the candor of the reader. If occasion for enthusiasm is found in discussing the merits of roasted pig, surely very much stronger is the argument in behalf of roasted Coffee. Having from his earliest business associations been personally connected with the Coffee-trade, the writer has always been greatly interested in collecting anything relating to the history, cultiva tion, or uses of this great staple. Long impressed with the idea that the mass of statistical figures that accumulate from day to day, in the many circulars and market reports received by those engaged in the importation and sale of coffee, tend rather to con fuse and detract from the importance of this constantly increasing branch of commerce, the following pages are intended to give such general information as may perhaps interest not only those who are familiar with the business, but also that multitudinous class to whom coffee now has become an indispensable beverage ; Vlll PREFACE. but who for the most part may not be familiar with its history and production. In a word, the work seeks to present, in a concise yet comprehensive form, all that relates to the history and cultivation of coffee in various countries, and the pernicious effects of its adulteration. The best authorities have been con sulted in its preparation ; and it is to be hoped — since it has been compiled in response to repeated inquiries for some such a manual, by persons engaged in the coffee-trade — that it may be found acceptable. As it would be great temerity on his part, after what has been already stated, to bespeak for the volume any special literary merit, its claims upon the favor of the reader must depend mainly upon the intrinsic value of its statements and facts j its typographic and pictorial character will bear its own comment. "After many erasures, interlinings, enlargings, and diminishings," it is at last completed, and, as it is the first attempt of a novice, it is deemed right and proper to say (in strictest confidence) that his vocation is simply that of a coffee-broker, one of that numerous fraternity whose business it is to please both buyer and seller, and who should be informed not only as to the present crop, but, to satisfy some, should have an opinion, when it is called for, as to all coming crops, etc., when chatting in the odd moments pending so momentous a transaction as a purchase or a sale (quantity not defined) of coffee. In fine, worthy reader, having thus far de tained thee with a relation of the intent and purpose of the fol lowing pages, it only remains, by thy courtesy, to venture the hope that what is now presented concerning the little aromatic berry may linger as pleasantly on thy mind and memory as a fragrant draught of its infusion does upon thy palate. KOBEET HEWITT, JE. Id • Coffee ! oh, Coffee ! Faith, it is surprising, 'Mid all the poets, good and bad and worse, Who've scribbled (Hock or Chian eulogizing) Post and papyrus with ' immortal verse,1 — Melodiously similitudinizing In Sapphics languid, or Alcaics terse, — No one, my little brown Arabian berry, Hath sung thy praises, — 'tis surprising, very ! " Is not the very name, COFFEE, suggestive of aromatic odors? Is it not, indeed, the fragrant incense we proffer at the shrine of the social hearth, — the delicious libation which wre pour on the altar of friendship \ Talk of the famed Falernian wine of the ancients, or the nectar and ambrosia of the gods ; what were they to a delectable 1* 10 INTRODUCTORY. draught of this world-renowned decoction ? Is it not the luxu rious accompaniment of the chibouk and the cigar, and one of the indispensable symbols of the hospitalities and amenities of life? Yes, better far than the Bacchanalian cup of old is this non-inebriating draught, since it may be indulged with impunity ; — for while it refreshes and stimulates, it does not stultify the mind. AYine, doubtless, inspired the ancient muse, and not, indeed, the ancient poets only; and poetry, which has been styled " the wine of the mind," was put into compe tition, in olden time, for the prize of a cask of wine ; while the Bacchic hymn, was styled the " hymn of the cask." The poets-laureate have also, from the minstrel-monk, Chaucer, down to their living representative in England, continued to receive their " pipe of wine ; " from all which it seems that the bards do not solely seek inspiration from the Heliconian fount ! As a salutary beverage coffee has never, perhaps, been duly estimated, since it is not only a digestive drink, but it has suppressed to a great extent that excessive indulgence in inebriating draughts, that so frequently dishonored the ban quets and prodigal hospitalities of former times. " Yes, the wine's a wayward child, — This the cup that ' draws it mild ! ' Deeply drink its stream divine, Fill the cup — but not with wine, — Potent port, or fiery sherry ; — For this milder cup of mine, Crush me Yemen's fragrant berry ! " Not alone in the East is the amber beverage indispensable ; it has also become a positive necessity in all the great capitals of Europe, as well as with all classes throughout the length and breadth of our own land. It has been well said by a recent writer, in one of our leading periodicals, — " that the proud son of the highest civilization can no longer live happily without the coffee of African robbers, the tobacco of the red barbarians, INTRODUCTORY. 11 the tea of the despised Chinese, and the sugar of the wretched Hindoo or enslaved negro. He cannot break his fast without coffee, nor finish his dinner ; and the whole social life of many nations is based upon the insignificant bean." The magic drink, which has held such unlimited sway over the social hospitalities of mankind for centuries, has also ministered to the relief of innumerable despairing dyspeptics, and achieved an incalculable amount of good, in rendering people more happy, and on better terms with themselves and everybody else, as well as more thoroughly equipped for encountering the battle of life. It is also suggestive of pleasant memories and visions of joyous, smiling groups that have graced the festive board, and shared with ourselves those genial " moods and tenses " that constitute much of the poetry of life. If the dreamy Mohammedan delights to divide his hours between the rival fascinations of his fragrant cup and the aroma of his " witching weed " in solemn silence, we of the Western World find in this favorite beverage a delightful auxiliary to some of our purest social pleasures. Its influence upon the social habits and intellectual culture of the age is a beneficent one, for it not only exhilarates the mind, but it also acts as a gentle stimulant, recuperative and sustaining to the physical frame. Since cotton has been proclaimed " king " in the realm of com merce, coffee should be styled " queen " among the beverages of domestic life. True, tea takes prominent rank with many of the gentler sex, yet its fair fame has been traditionally suggestive of a love of scandal ; while the aromatic berry is wholly free from such a stigma.^ Had the learned lexicogra pher been less prodigal in his use of tea, and indulged himself with a frequent cup of fragrant coffee, he doubtless would have exhibited less asperity and angularity of character, and might have become as genial as he was wise. Like coffee, tobacco is also a potent plant ; — both alike hold absolute sway 12 INTRODUCTORY. over millions of mankind; yet, yielding too freely to the seductive influence of the narcotic weed, we may have to suffer the penalty, while with the aromatic berry nature is rarely in revolt. The one stimulates but to enervate ; the other refreshes and sustains. Coffee also is a better disinfectant than tobacco. In the olden time, when the " occult sciences," so called, were in vogue with the learned as well as the superstitious, women indulged implicit faith in omens, premonitions, and " signs." In Brande's " Antiquities," allusion is made to a curious species of divination by, or tossing of, coffee-grounds. The narrator relates a visit he paid to a lady ; — " whom he surprised with her company in close cabal over their coffee, the rest very in tent upon one whom by her address and intelligence he guessed was a tire-woman, to which she added the secret of divining by coffee-grounds. She was then in full inspiration, and with much solemnity observing the atoms around the cup ; on the one hand sat a widow, on the other a maiden lady. . . . They assured him that every cast of the cup is a picture of all one's life to come, and every transaction and circumstance is delinea ted writh the exactest certainty," etc. The same practice is also noticed in the Connoisseur, where a girl is represented divining to find out of what rank her husband should be : — " I have seen him several times in coffee-grounds, with a sword by his side ; and he was once at the bottom of a tea- cup, in a coach-and-six, with two footmen behind it ! " Leigh Hunt thus pleasantly discourses upon our subject: " Coffee, like tea, used to form a refreshment by itself, some hours after dinner ; it is now taken as a digester, right upon that meal or the wine, and sometimes does not even close it ; or the digester itself is digested by a liqueur of some sort called a chasse-cafe (coffee-chaser). "We like coffee better than tea for the taste, but tea ' for a constancy.' To be perfect in point of relish (we do not say of wholesomeness), coffee should INTRODUCTORY. 13 be strong and hot, with little milk and sugar. It has been drunk after this mode in some parts of Europe, but the public have nowhere, we believe, adopted it. The favorite way of taking it as a meal, abroad, is with a great superfluity of milk — very properly called, in France, cafe-au-lait (coffee to the milk). One of the pleasures we receive in drinking coffee is that, being the universal drink in the East, it reminds of that region of the c Arabian Nights,' as smoking does for the same reason ; though neither of these refreshments, which are identified with Oriental manners, is to be found in that enchanting work. They had not been discovered when it was written ; the drink then was sherbet. One can hardly fancy what a Turk or a Persian could have done without coffee and a pipe, any more than the English ladies and gentlemen, before the civil wars, without tea for breakfast." Thus much, then, may suffice as our " apology " for propos ing to the reader to accompany us in our rapid survey of the career of coffee over the globe, since its first discovery. What we have here gleaned from a great variety of sources concern ing the fragrant berry, has been to the compiler by no means a theme devoid of interest ; but should the reader not be of the same opinion, it may not be inappropriate to suggest that, before committing to him the results of our researches, he should fortify himself with a cup of the inspiring beverage, and thus be put into true sympathy with the subject. FAMILIAR as we all are with Coffee as a beverage, yet com paratively how few of us ever imagine that its history can be found to possess any particular interest, or deserve any especial notice. We sip the aromatic draught when athirst, and derive from it a sense of renewed vigor when aweary ; but when is our curiosity provoked, or prompted ^ "%J'-s*~ to inquire, as to who was the benefactor that first discovered its virtues, where it first grew, and by what curious process or manipulation we derive the deli- THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 15 cious drink \ Everything has, indeed, its history or tradition, and so has the fragrant little berry, the aromatic incense of which so gratefully greets our olfactory nerve, at the repast which ushers in the dawn and close of day. Coffee, it appears, became known to civilization at an epoch memorable for many marvellous events. It was about the time of the great awakening of mankind from the long slumbers of the Middle Ages, when those great luminaries, Columbus and Faust, blazed upon the world. One brought to light a new hemisphere, and the other gave to mankind the " art preserva tive of arts," and the light of intelligence to the whole civilized O O globe. Coffee was originally known by the name of Kauhi, an orthography somewhat suggestive of a certain Town Council lor of Leeds, who, writing out a " bill of fare " for a public breakfast, contrived 'to spell coffee without employing a single letter that occurs in that word, thus — Kawpliy ! Although the plant or tree is indigenous to Southern Abyssinia, where it is even to the present day cultivated, yet it derived its name from Kaffa,) in Eastern Africa, where the plant also grows wild, and very abundantly. The Malays, who from their intercourse with the Arabs have long known the berry, call it by the Arabian name, l£awah j the Javanese, however, in common with our selves, designate it Coffee. There is an Eastern legend which ascribes the discovery of the berry to a Dervish named Hadji Omer, who, in the year 1285, being driven out of Mocha, was induced, in the extremity of hunger, to roast the berries which grew near his hiding-place. He ate them, as the only means of sustaining life ; and steeping the roasted berries in water, to quench his thirst, he thus discovered their agreeable qualities, and also that the infusion was nearly equal to solid food. His persecutors, who had intended that he should die of starvation, regarded his preservation as a miracle. He was ac cordingly transmuted into a saint forthwith ! 16 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. According to the manuscript of Scliehabeddin Ben, an Arabian Scribe of the ninth century of the Hegira, or the fifteenth of the Christian era, which manuscript is, or was, in the great Library of the city of Paris, we learn, that a certain Mufti, or Mohammedan high-priest, named Gemal Eddin, of Aden, a town of Arabia Felix, wTas the first who introduced to his countrymen the custom of coffee-drinking. Having returned from visiting Persia, where he had observed the beverage used as a medicine, and being at the time himself sick, he tried as an experiment a dose of the " black draught." Finding it both curative and exhilarating, he forthwith turned his discovery to good account, by applying its virtues as an antidote to the torpor and drowsiness of his monks, whom he had often found dormant at their devotions. The example and authority of the Mufti at once conferred on coffee a reputation, and it speedily came into general use, not only on account of its sleep-dispelling power, but also for its other good qualities. Coffee, which had been in use in Ethiopia, it is believed, from time immemorial, was carried by the Der vishes to Mecca, where the beverage became so popular with the sons of the prophet that its fame soon extended to other towns adjacent. It continued its career through Syria, and was re ceived without opposition at Damascus and Aleppo, and in the year 1554 became the favorite drink at Constantinople, where, soon after, coffee-houses were opened. In the same proportion that the coffee-houses were thronged, the mosques became deserted ; and the priests represented that no doubt the new drink wras forbidden by the Koran, for that the roasted berry was certainly a kind of coal, and that as such it was prohibited by the Prophet's law. The Mufti, on a peti tion to this effect, without hesitation decided that coffee was coal ; nevertheless, in spite of frequent enactments against it, the people continued to drink it. The exertions of the police were THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 17 ineffectual, and the government was at length contented to re strain its use merely by rigid sumptuary laws. Coffee was taxed, and the black draught was allowed to be drunk in secret. But ere long another Mufti arose, of a less antiphlogistic turn, and he pronounced coffee not coal, but a right remunerative item of government tax. At a later day, when too much free dom of political discussion took place in the Oriental coffee houses, they were suppressed by the Grand Yizier; yet the beverage continued to be almost universally used, some persons taking even twenty dishes of it in a day — the dishes, however, wTere small. The lower classes also actually begged money for coffee ; and it is added by the chronicler of the time, that " the refusing to supply a wife with coffee was admitted in law as a valid cause of divorce." From the " city of the Sultan " it passed to Western Europe, but at what precise time, historians have not positively determined. It is believed to have been intro duced into Yenice about the year 1615. In 1644 it was known at Marseilles, M. de la Haye having taken with him some of the coffee-beans from Constantinople, with vessels and an apparatus for making the beverage. The traveller Thevenot was among the first to introduce into Paris the custom of taking coffee after dinner ; but he had few imitators until ten years after, — about 1668, when the coffee parties of the Turkish ambassador at Paris brought the bever age into fashion. " The brilliant porcelain cups," says Disraeli, " in which it is poured, — the napkins fringed with gold, and the Turkish slaves, on their knees, presenting it to the ladies, seat ed on the ground on cushions, — turned the heads of the Parisian dames," the exotic soon became a subject of general conver sation, and a cafe was opened for the sale of the beverage, in 1671, by an Armenian of the name of Pascal. The enterprise did not succeed, however, on account of the heterogeneous com pany that met there. A few years later, Procope, a Florentine, 18 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. who became noted as an arbiter of taste in such matters, opened a splendid saloon, at which the rank and fashion of the French capital used to assemble. Soon the cafe became the resort of the most renowned wits, artists, and philosophers of the French metropolis — Rousseau, Voltaire, Piron, with Marmontel and many others. The univer sal favor in which coffee is still held in Paris, sufficiently dis proves the accuracy of the famous prophecy of Madame de Sevigne, — that "coffee and Racine would have their day." Among the most noted of the Parisian cafes were those known as the Cafe des Mille Colonnes, and the Cafe Turc, on the Boulevard, which wrere fitted up with oriental splendor, as glit tering with ornament as an opium-eater's dreams, or the glow ing tints of a page of VatheJc. The high favor with which coffee came at length to be re garded in the houses of the great, may be inferred from the fact that a sum equivalent to $15,000 a year was expended for supplying the daughters of Louis XY. of France with the bev erage. In 1714 the magistrates of Amsterdam presented Louis XIY. with a coffee-tree, which was sent to the Royal Gardens. It was Louis XIY. who directed M. Des Clieux to take one of the plants to Martinique, one of the French West India possessions. The voyage proved so tempestuous and prolonged that he was compelled to divide his water-rations with it, in order to keep it alive. From that parent plant an immense progeny has sprung. The consumption of coffee in the French capital at the breaking out of the Revolution was something enormous. We find it estimated that the French West India Islands furnished no less than eighty millions of pounds of it yearly, and this was irrespective of a liberal supply from the East. The two sources combined were not even adequate to the supply of the demand. We are not surely to infer from this circumstance that coffee itself possesses any Revolutionary element. THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 19 It was to this extraordinary demand for coffee that the adul terations of the berry may be traced ; — the adulterers made for tunes by their combination of chiccory with it, but the well- earned reputation of the French suffered by the admixture. At the " Cafe Procope," the earliest of these establishments in Paris, a curious incident, worth mentioning, occurred con cerning a cup of coffee. As M. Saint Foix was one day seated at his usual table in this cafe, an officer of the king's body-guard entered, sat down, and ordered a cup of coffee, with milk and a roll, adding, " It will serve me for a dinner ! " At this Saint Foix remarked aloud, " that a cup of coffee, with milk and a roll, was a confoundedly poor dinner." The officer remonstrated. Saint Foix reiterated his remark, adding, that nothing he could say to the contrary would convince him that it was not a con foundedly poor dinner. Thereupon a challenge was given and accepted, and the \vhole company present adjourned as spectators of a fight, which ended by Saint Foix receiving a wound in the arm. " That is all very well," said the wounded combatant, " but I call you to witness, gentlemen, that I am still profoundly convinced that a cup of coffee, with milk and a roll, is a confoundedly poor dinner ! " At this moment the principals were arrested and carried before the Duke de Noailles, in whose presence St. Foix, without waiting to be questioned, said, " Mon- seigneur, I had not the slightest intention of offending the gal lant officer, who, I doubt not, is an honorable man, but your Excellency can never prevent my asserting that a cup of coffee, with milk and a roll, is a confoundedly poor dinner." — " AVhy, so it is," said the Duke. " Then I am not in the wrong," per sisted St. Foix, " and a cup of coffee," — at these words magis trates, delinquents, and auditory burst into a roar of laughter, and the antagonists became forthwith warm friends. The oldest cafe in the Palais Royal is the celebrated " Cafe de Foy," so called from the name of its founder. Carl Yernet was one of 20 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. its most constant patrons. Pie was there on one occasion when some repairs were going on, and in his impatience he flung a wet coloring-brush from him which struck the ceiling and left a spot. He immediately ascended the ladder, and with a touch of his finder converted the stain into a swallow ; and his handi- O j work was to be seen until the recent sieo;e of Paris. It was • before this cafe that Desmoulins harangued the mob, in July, 1789, with such effect that they took up arms, destroyed the Bastille, and inaugurated the fearful scenes of the Revolution. The Germans were initiated into the practice of coffee-drinking by their neighbors the French, and also by the Dutch. The beverage did not, however, become popular with them until the Elector of Brandenburg caused its virtues and praises to be celebrated in a book, which he disseminated among the people. We have already spoken of the devotion of the Turk to this drink, now almost the universal beverage of the East. It is difficult to transfer ourselves in thought and feeling to the glowing scenes of the Orient. Imagine yourself peering into one of the brilliant divans of the " City of the Sultan," with its tessellated court-yard, and its towering pinnacle or minaret, nestled among mulberry trees and pomegranates. In the cen tre of the richly decorated saloon is the cooling fountain, which scatters its silvery spray and fantastic foam over groups of bril liant flowers, while on every side the eye is regaled with varie gated marbles, magnificent arabesques, and gaudy hangings, relieved with gilded devices of matchless beauty. In some such circumstances of luxurious splendor may be seen the indolent Osmanli regaling himself with his favorite weed, and a cup of his unmixed Mocha silently brought to him by his Nubian slave, in brilliant costume. Among the surrounding groups are some Arabs at chess, while others may be listening to one of the famous Oriental story-tellers, or gazing at the tricks of some juggler, or witnessing the exploits of a dancing dervish. But THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 21 silence, indolence, and stolidity are the prevailing characteris tics of the Turkish divan. In Persia, however, the scene is changed ; there the coffee-houses are full of stir and activity. Soon after morning prayers are announced from the minaret, the people flock to their coffee-houses, which are often beautifully decorated, and there they sip their coffee, smoke, and listen to the wise sayings of Sadi, or the songs of Hafiz, or talk over the news of the hour. Those who have visited the Havana and roamed through that delightful city will remember with pleasurable sensations the magnificent cafe's, and especially the " Louvre." Sauntering from the city gates, where the white-clad officials, with Panama hats, demand from all travellers landing from the steamers a silver fee for permission to remain a certain number of days upon the island, the " looker-on at Yienna " strolls through the lovely " Plaza de Armas " with its fountains and its flowers ; halts for a few moments on the paved walks, and while lis tening to the music of the military band, admires the beautiful faces and graceful toilets of the fair promenaders, who pass and repass under the lamps, enjoying the tropical twilight. Taking a victoria, which is the popular vehicle always to be found ready to convey passengers to any part of the city, he is whirled past the palace of the Governor-General, and through narrow streets, between the massive walls of houses on either side, until he alights at the " Louvre." This cafe is situated opposite the Tacon theatre, wrhich is known for its elegance of construction and rich appointments. Facing it is a splendid park, used as a promenade during the evening, when it is brilliantly illuminated. It is the fashionable resort for promenaders. The scene is worth witnessing, presenting a changing panorama of brilliant variety, while richly ap pointed equipages, volantes and other vehicles, all gayly equipped, are constantly passing. 22 THE HISTOEY OF COFFEE. Leaving the victoria, which has by this time obtained another fare, the cafe with its open doors attracts attention. Entering the grand saloon on the first floor, level with the narrow sidewalks, which permit only one pedestrian to pass comfortably at a time, the visitor seats himself at one of the small marble-covered tables that are plentifully distributed over the tiled floor ; and whatever the temperature of the streets may be, the cafes are always cool, and at them may be met, at certain hours of the day, many English and American visitors and residents. Immediately when seated, one of the attendants approaches and politely asks, in Spanish, for orders ; an attempt to make the waiter comprehend English will generally meet with signal failure. While enjoying the delicious coffee and a choice cigar, the visitor looks about the saloon, which is fitted up in a style of magnificence out- rivalling all other cafes in the city. At each of the small tables are groups of Spaniards, Cubans, Germans, Englishmen, and Americans, with here and there an officer in brilliant uniform, all chatting, drinking coffee, or sipping light wines, and each, with rare exceptions, fondling a cigar. All over this interesting city, more especially in the older portion of it, inside the now nearly obliterated lines of ancient walls, the cafes confront the passer-by at nearly every square. Watching an old coffee-drinker in the " Louvre " one day, he was seen to carefully drop the white lumps of sugar into his cup until the top of the sweet pile rose just above the rich yellow fluid, and then gently rubbing his palms together, he prepared himself to enjoy the nectar. " La Dominica " was formerly the favorite cafe, but it has of late years been superseded by more modern establishments ; it is still however well patronized, but makes more of a specialty in manufacturing " dulces " or sweetmeats, which have a world-wide reputation, especially the guava jelly, most of which comes from this entrepot. The Havanese THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 23 understand pretty well how to make and drink coffee, and never hesitate to avail themselves of its invigorating influence. When dwellers in the tropics — not only in this delightful island but wherever coffee is grown — once learn how to make coffee in perfection, which can only be done by steam-heat, a new impetus will be given to the growth of the bean, for, like all discoveries of value, the better an article is produced, the more universally is it used. Coffee was first regularly introduced into England about the middle of the seventeenth century, as we learn from the fol lowing extract from Sir Henry Blount, who visited Turkey in 1634:— "The Turks have a drink," he writes, "called Cauphe, made of a berry as big as a small bean, dried in a furnace, and beat to a powder of- a sooty color, in taste a little bitterish, that they seethe and drink, hot as may be endured. It is good at all hours of the day, but especially at morning and evening, when to that purpose they entertain themselves two or three hours in cauphe-houses, which, in Turkey, abound more than Inns and ale-houses with us." Notwithstanding the opposition and pre judice which prevailed against the beverage for nearly a score of years after its first introduction, the coffee-houses continued to increase in London and other large cities of England. All classes resorted to them ; literary men and artists, mercantile men and the votaries of fashion, all had their respective coffee houses. Thus — • " Mocha's berry, from Arabia pure, In small, fine, china cups came in at last." The English and French dispute the honor of being the first introducers of coffee into "Western Europe. Coffee was not used at Rome until long after it had been known to, and tasted by, Italian travellers at Constantinople; the Church, however, looked with favor upon a beverage, one effect of 24 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. which was to keep both priests and people awake. Although the coffee-houses of England take precedence of those of France, yet the latter have more enduringly flourished. On the authority of Oldys, the antiquary, " the first use of coffee in England was known in 1657, when one Edwards, a Turkey merchant, brought from Smyrna to London one Pasqua Rosee, a Ragusan youth, who prepared this drink for him every morning. But the novelty thereof drawing too much company to him, he allowed his said servant, with another of his sons-in-law, to sell it publicly ; and they set up the first coffee-house in London, in St. Michael's Alley, Cornhill. But they separating, Pasqua kept in the house ; and he who had been his partner obtained leave to pitch a tent, and sell the liquor, in St. Michael's Churchyard." Aubrey, in his "Anecdotes," states that the first vender of coffee in London was one Bowman, coachman to a Turkey merchant named Hodges, who was the father-in-law of Edwards, and the partner of Pasqua, who got into difficulties, partly by his not being a freeman, and who left the country. Bowman was not only patronized, but a magnificent contribution of one thousand sixpences wras presented to him, wherewith he made great improvements in his coffee-house. Bowman took an appren tice (Paynter), who learned the mystery of coffee-making, and soon after set up for himself. The coffee-houses, after this, soon became numerous. The frequenters of coffee-houses, however, were not then regarded as belonging to the most reputable classes of society, and the proposed substitution of a cup of the Arabian infusion for Canary wine, provoked the opposition of the wits and satirists. The ladies, also, declared against its being thus sold at coffee-houses, — from which they were excluded, — as being unsocial and uncivil. On the other hand, apologists and advocates were not wanting in their behalf : one of the most THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 25 curious of which was that of Aubrey, — the Boswell of his day? — who declared that he should never have acquired so extensive an acquaintance but for the " modern advantages of coffee-houses in this great city; before which men knew not how to be acquainted but with their own relations and societies ! " An animated controversy was kept up about coffee during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Among the squibs and lampoons of the time may be mentioned the following piquant titles : — " The Coffee-house Granado" " The Women's Petition against Coffee" and" The Men's Answer to the same" Another was entitled, " A cup of Coffee, or Coffee in its true Colour : " and a grave writer in prose issued a grotesque hand-bill, headed with a rude cut of coffee-bibbers, surrounded with the following eulogistic legend : " A brief description of the excellent vertues of that sober and wholesome drinke, called coffee, and its incomparable effects in preventing or curing most diseases incidental to human bodies ! " When first introduced into London, coffee sold at from four to five guineas a pound. In. spite of opposition, coffee soon became a favorite drink, and the shops where it was sold, places of general resort ! Another of the earliest coffee-houses of London was the well-known "Rainbow," near Temple Bar, which still flourishes, but altogether in a new style. In 1675 a proclama tion was issued for closing all coffee-houses. The government soon found, however, that in making such a proclamation they had gone a step too far; for the coffee-houses of even that day had become a " power in the land." They w^ere indeed the chief organs through which the public opinion of the metropolis was expressed. That coffee-houses in Charles the Second's time were regarded as headquarters for the news of the day, we gather from a "broadside" song, which com mences thus : — 2 26 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. *' You that delight in wit and mirth, and long to hear such news As come from all parts of the earth, — Dutch, Danes, and Turks, and Jews ; — • I'll send you to a rendezvous, where it is smoking new ; And coming from the coffee-house, it cannot but be true ! " Doran, in his amusing volume, " Table Traits," nas gathered some curious items and incidents connected with the old London coffee-houses which are replete with interest, and which we shall condense for the reader. The "Grecian" was one of the most noted of the old establishments of this kind in London ; it appears to have been the oldest of the better-known of the coffee-houses, and to have lasted the longest. It was opened by one Constantino, a Greek, living in the latter part of the seven teenth century, and its location was in the vicinity of St. Christo pher's Church. Its longevity is not a little remarkable, for its career came to a close only in the year 1843, when the u Grecian Coffee-house" became transformed into the "Grecian Chambers," or lodgings for bachelors. The establishment did not exist in the same locality, however, all the time ; for at the time of its transformation the " Grecian " was situated in Devereux Street, Strand. In its palmy days it was the resort of the learned and aristocratic, and its classic name seems not to have been dishonored by its fame. Sparkling humor and genial repartee would often flash responsive to the inspiring but non-inebriating cup, and thus qualify the gravity of those learned pundits who would gather there, not to discuss the trivialities of the day, but those weightier matters that concern the rise and fall of dy nasties, — such as the fate of Rome and the events which issued from the Trojan war. Yet then, as now, satirists would seize upon the points of humor ; and as there were pedants as well as philosophers who convened at the " Grecian," so lampoons and literary squibs were not wanting to enliven the scene. It was a time when both sages and sciolists wore swords ; and it is on record that two friendly scholars, sipping their THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 27 coffee at the " Grecian," became enemies in argument, the subject of which was the accent of a Greek word. Whatever the accent ought to have been, the quarrel was acute, and its conclusion grave. The scholars rushed into Devereux Court, drew their swords, and as one was run through the body and killed on the spot, it is to be supposed that he was necessarily wrong. A duel, however, was certainly a strange way of settling a ques tion in grammar. The " coffee-houses " which were resorted to for mere conversation as well as coffee began on a first floor ; they were the seed, as it were, whence has arisen the political and exclusive " club " of the present day. The advantages of association were first experienced in coffee-houses ; but at the same time it must be admitted that there also was felt the annoyance caused by intrusive and unwelcome strangers. " Wills's Coffee-house," also known as the " Wits " from its com pany, was situated at the west corner of Bow Street, Covent Garden. In the last half of the seventeenth century, its popularity was at its height. It was at Wills's that Dryden " pedagogued " without restraint, and accepted without a blush any amount of flattery on his literary productions. He was the great literary luminary around which lesser orbs and satellites revolved. He had the good sense, however, to retire early, when the tables were full, and he knew he had made a favora ble impression ; but Addison, more given to jolly fellowship, sat late with those who stayed to indulge " libations deep." Of the disputes that there arose, " Glorious John " was arbiter : for his particular use a chair was especially reserved ; therein enthroned he sat by the hearth or the balcony, according to the season, and delivered his decisions. Another of the renowned London coffee-houses was " Button's," in Great Russell Street ; this was Addison's favorite rendezvous, although the fruit of the vine was, in his case, preferred to the infusion of the berry. There, after writing during the forenoon at his house in 28 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. St. James's Place, — where his breakfast table was attended by such men as Steele, Davenant, Carey, Philips, Pope, and other bards and writers of note, — he was to be found of an evening until supper. Pope was of the company for about a year, but left it partly because late hours injured his health, and partly also because his irritable temper had rendered him unpopular. He had so provoked Ambrose Philips, indeed, that the latter sus pended a birchen-rod over Pope's usual seat, in intimation of what the ordinary occupant would get if he ventured into it. The Buttonians were famous for the fierceness of their criti cism. Of coffee-houses that went by the name of " Tom's " there were three : at that in Birchen-lane Garrick frequently might have been seen ; and poor Chatterton, before fell despair slew him. At the other coffee-house known as " Tom's," in Devereux Court, Akenside, with many of the scholars, critics, and scientists of the day used to congregate ; but the " Tom's " was opposite Button's, in Great Russell Street. It was a place generally crowded with incident, from the time of Queen Anne to that of George III. Seven hundred of the nobility, literary notabilities, and wits of celebrity were guinea subscribers to this establishment ; most of the company, however, consoled themselves with something more potent than coffee. The poli ticians as well as the poets had their coffee-houses ; the " Cocoa- Tree " in St. James's Street was the Tory house in the reign of Queen Anne ; the " St. James's " was the Whig house. Here occasionally might have been seen members of Parliament, also a galaxy of literary stars. This had a more solid reputation than any other of the coffee-houses except " White's." " Gar- raways," or Garway, as the original proprietor wras called, wras one of the earliest coffee-sellers in London, and his house was frequented by the nobility and gentry, as well as others who wished to sip the aromatic beverage. All these places, and many others which might be referred to, were in full activity of THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 29 business and coffee-drinking in the reign of Queen Anne. Another notable coffee-house was known as " Squire's/' at which the lawyers and politicians were accustomed to meet in considerable numbers; and there, it will be remembered, " Sir Roger de Coverley " smoked a pipe over a dish of coffee with the " Spectator." But we have been loitering, perhaps too long, about the old London coffee-houses, and in tracing the history of Cafes in Europe and the East ; still we cannot dismiss the subject without referring to the history of coffee-houses in our own country. The consumption of the berry is constantly and rapidly increasing in the United States, the increased ratio being greater than the most sanguine advocate of the beverage could ever have predicted, and pure coffee must soon be so exten sively and universally used that all pertaining to its history will be of interest to the world at large. In no place in the world, probably, are the influences and healthful effects of pure coffee more happily displayed than in what is known to every resident and visitor of the Crescent City as the old French market of New Orleans. Here, from the " earliest time," have been coffee-venders conveniently distri buted throughout the great maze of stalls and marts, and from the small hours in the morning until nearly noon the distribu ters of this most invigorating of beverages are busy as bees. Aside from their special occupation, these dealers in coffee are a peculiar people. It seems to be an appropriate vocation in this genial climate, which at once strikes the observant tra veller when he first sees a French or Spanish mulatto, with her head curiously covered by a gayly striped bandanna, serving hot coffee. Yet it is a fact that it is only people who answer to this description who are the most thorough experts in extracting the delicious taste from the berry, in keeping the delightful aroma from passing away in the rising steam, in pro- 30 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. viding the best kinds of sugar and the most honest and well- cleaned cups and saucers. At the shrine of one of these ven ders in the early hours of the morning, when the fogs of the Mississippi are rolling over the Crescent City, breaking like clouds against the intervening houses, and filling the air with sickly miasma which nauseates the unfortunate whose business calls him out before the fogs are dissipated, then it is that coffee is most prized. Look at the recipient, who with blanched face, dull eyes, and depressed mien, reaches out his hand and seizes upon the nectar. The moment the fragrance reaches his nos trils a transformation for the better commences, the eyes grow bright, a healthful color and natural fulness returns to the cheeks, smiles wTeath the mouth, the mind becomes active, the fogs, the dark air, effluvia of all sorts are exorcised like ghosts fleeing before the penetrating rays of the unobstructed sun. The European, the Creole, the New Englander, the men of the West and the far-off Orient, all visit the coffee-stands. While partaking there is for the instant a touch of nature which makes mankind akin, for it is observable that the recipients of the morning cup of pure Java are sociable. Artificial distinc tions are discarded in the very act of drinking in the crowded market, or even standing in the open street. But it is the very thing, this mixture of the rude and the refined, that adds zest to the " open-air cup of coffee." The merry twinkle of the eye of the attendant quadroon, her quiet manners, her attentive observ ance of the wants and tastes of the various customers, the very polish of the tall copper kettle, the jet of steam, the whiteness of the crockery, constitute associations that, once realized, one never forgets, and justly places coffee among the most grateful, innocent, and healthful things that we Americans include among the necessaries of life. The coffee-houses of New York are intimately associated with the history of the city. Within their walls have been the THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 31 scenes and players whose actions made the pulses of the nation throb in high excitement, or calmed them to deep repose. The early records show that in 1643 Martin Krigier became the owner of a plot of land on the west side of what is now called Broadway, nearly opposite the north end of the Bowling Green, and built on it Krigier's Tavern. It soon became a resort of the fashionable men of the day, and was at times the headquarters of the Dutch Governor, William Kieft. It was removed in after-years, and on its site was built the " King's Arms Tavern." During the excitement previous to the He volution, it was known as Burn's Coffee-House, and was used for the meetings of merchants and the associations of " Liberty Boys." On the 31st of October, 1765, the merchants engaged in the importa tion of English goods met at Burn's Coffee-House, arid adopted resolutions to import no more goods from England until the Stamp Act was repealed. Two hundred merchants signed the resolutions. During the same evening a non-importation soci ety was formed in the same place, and a committee on cor respondence appointed, comprising many of the well-known merchants of New York. During the Revolution the house became the headquarters of General Gage, of the British army. Years rolled on, and when Time touched the spot again it wras changed into the Atlantic Gardens. In the summer of 1860 o the ground was purchased by the Hudson River Railroad Com pany, and the old house was removed to make room for a freight depot. At the foot of Wall street, still known among the old mer chants as Coffee-House Slip, was the Merchants' Coffee-House. It stood on the southeast corner of Wall and Water streets, and before the erection of the Tontine Coffee-House, in 1792, was, in fact, the Merchants' Exchange, and political headquarters of colonial times. . In 1762 a petition was presented to the city authorities for the removal of the meal-market at the foot 32 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. of AYall street, because " it was disagreeable to those that pass to and from the Coffee-Iiouse, a place of great resort." The meal-market was built in 1709, and occupied the site of the ancient half-moon fortification and block-house of the Dutch era. The Merchants' Coffee-Iiouse was five stories high, the entrance being even with the sidewalk ; a light balcony crossed the front and side of the house at the second story. That it was a business centre in the early days of the city may be gathered from the following copy of an advertisement in the newspapers of April 9, 1750 : — " For London. The Ship Brave Hawke, John Bill, Commander ; "Will sail in about Ten Days : For Freight or Passage agree with John Troup, or said Master. Just imported a parcel of Likely Negroes to be sold at publick Vendue, To-morrow at Ten o'Clock, at the Merchants' Coffee House." A New York price-current of August 6th, 1750, quotes coffee at 20 pence per pound. The Merchants' Coffee- House wras destroyed by fire on December 18th, 1804. The site was afterwards occupied by the offices of the New York Journal of Commerce, one of the most prominent commercial newspapers in the country. While the bounds of the city were somewhat limited, — Broadway extending only as far as Worth street, and the line of Canal street and Broadway was so distant from the city that one of the Lutheran churches, to whom was offered six acres of land at that point, declined the gift because the land was not worth fencing in,- -coffee-houses were numerous in ISTew York. Richard Clarke Cook, who had bought the interest of Andrew Ramsey in the "King's Arms'-' on Dock street, near the Long Bridge, reopened it on May 7th, 1750, as "The Gentlemen's and Exchange Coffee-Iiouse and Tavern." Perhaps the most famous was the City Tavern. It was built in the early part of the last century, by the Delancey family, and still stands on the southeast corner of Broad and Dock, now Broad and Pearl streets. In 1757 it was occupied by THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. Delancey, Kobinson & Co., for the sale of "East India goods, shoes, stockings, and shirts, white and checked, fit for the army, with a variety of other goods." On the loth of January, 1762, the property was conveyed to Samuel Francis, or, as he after wards signed his name, Samuel Fraunces. He was the Del- monico of that age, having been the proprietor of the " Mason's Arms," near the Bowling Green, the Yauxhall Gardens in Greenwich street, and the great Philadelphia stage-office in Cortlandt street. Fraunces opened the house 011 Broad street as a tavern, under the sign of " Queen Charlotte." In 1765 Fraunces retired, and was followed by John Jones. In 1766 Jones withdrew in favor of Bolton & Sigell, \vho were thus advertised in HoWs New York Journal ; — " Bolton & Sigell Take this method to acquaint the Publick that they propose to open, on Monday next, a Coffee-House at the House of Mr. Samuel Francis, near the Exchange, lately kept by Mr. John Jones, and known by the name of the ' Queen's Head Tavern,' where Gentlemen may depend upon receiving the best of Usage. As Strangers, they are sensible they can have no Pretensions to the Favour of the Public but what results from their readiness upon all occasions to oblige." The house enjoyed a fair share of business. The societies met there as in the time of Fraunces ; the Chamber of Commerce held its monthly meetings there until it secured a room of its own ; yet the business was not profitable, and in 1770 Mr. Sigell retired from the firm. In the same year Mr. Bolton gave up the business, and Fraunces again took possession. It was during this last term of Fraunces that the " Citv," or, as it O J " was better known, " Fraunces's Tavern," acquired its celebrity. Large dinner-parties were held there, and among the societies that met in the upper rooms during the winter was the "Social Club." During the summer this Club encamped at Kip's Bay Meetings were held on Saturday evenings, and on the rolls were 34 THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. the well-known names of John Jay, member of Congress, minis ter to Spain, minister to England, and Governor of New York ; Gouverneur Morris, Robert R. Livingston, Morgan Lewis, Eg bert Benson, Gulian Yerplanck, President of the Bank of New York ; John Watts, Leonard and Anthony Lispenard, Richard Harrison, Peter Yan Schaack, Daniel Lndlow, afterwards President of the Manhattan Bank ; William Imlay, and Dr. Samuel Bard, Washington's favorite physician. The Club was broken up in 1775. In the parlor on the second floor of Fraunces's Tavern, on the 4th day of December, 1783, occurred the most sadly impressive scene in Washington's history. At noon the officers of the army were there assembled, at the re quest of the great chieftain, to finally part. The scene has been so often described that it needs no repetition here. In 1789, Fraunces, or, as he was sometimes called, "Black Sam," became the chief steward in Washington's household, at the residence of the first President, No. 3 Cherry street, near Frank lin square, where we are told Mrs. Washington furnished her guests on New Year's day, 1790, with coffee, tea, plum and plain cake. The celebrated Tontine Coffee-House, on the north-west cor ner of Wall and Water streets, was commenced in 1792, and was the scene of many stirring events in the annals of history and trade. The Merchants' Coffee-House, on the opposite corner, was then called the Old Coffee-House, and its business was gradually transferred to the Tontine, to which place the Ex change was moved from the dingy building in the middle of Broad street, between Pearl and the river, where it had been since the revolution. The following extracts from an article on the Tontine Coffee-House will be read with interest : — " In 1795 the old Coffee-House was in full operation, but who can tell us of the scenes therein ? Who can call back the voices THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 35 of the old merchants of that day, and repeat the stories they laughed over in the Coffee-IIouse on ' opening night ? ' " At length the Merchants' Exchange moved further up AYall street, and sales of merchandise were not so frequent within the old house, but the long stoop on the Wall street front was still used, an 1 the advertisements of the day read, ' At X o'clock, in front of T. C., will be sold ' - — ." It was designed to provide a central location for the mercan tile community. The merchants had long felt the need of some place where they could assemble and discuss the probable re sults of trade and the various questions of the time, and during their leisure indulge in a cup of prime old coffee without walk ing to their distant homes in State street, Bowling Green, and the lower part of Greenwich street. The property was pur chased by five merchants, and held by them under the provi sions of the Tontine Association as the first board of directors. "In 1826 and 1827 the Tontine Coffee-IIouse was in the hands of John Morse, who had formerly kept the old Stage- House at the corner of Church and Crown streets, ISTew Haven. He turned the entire house into a tavern, and it so remained for several years. The first floor was in one room, running the full length of the house, and fronting Wall street. At the back of the room, extending nearly its whole length, was the old-fash ioned bar. Jutting out from the counter were curious arms of brass, supporting the thick, round, and mast-like timber on which the heavy dealers leaned while ordering refreshments. About the room were numerous small tables, and after supper, in fair weather, around the tables could be seen many of the wealthy city men, diminishing the contents of their pewter mugs, or planning, amid the curling smoke in the room, their operations for the next day. Morse was not successful in the Tontine, and was finally sold out for the benefit of ' whom it might concern.' " In 1832 it was kept as a hotel by Lovejoy & Belcher, and 36 THE HISTOEY OF COFFEE. was the scene of several brilliant Masonic dinners. The lodges, c5 ' in annual parade, would march from the City Hotel, on Broad way, down to Broad street ; through Broad to Pearl, and through Pearl street to Wall and the Coffee-IIouse — which they thought a long tramp. After the banquet the inarch would be resumed along Pearl to Beekman street, up Beekman to Chatham street, down Chatham to Broadway and the City Hotel. Caldwell & Kenyon kept a restaurant in the basement; they afterwards sold out to Charles Ridabock, familiarly known as the ' Alderman.' Charles was a heavy, good-natured Ger man, who kept the dirtiest shop and the best oysters in the city. He had been for many years an employe of George Washing ton Browne. In 1823, when the entire block on the west side of Water street, between Pine and Wall streets, was mainly occupied by the stores and offices of auctioneers, a hotel was opened on the opposite side, at Nos. 123 and 125 Water street, by George Washington Browne, and called the i Auction Hotel.' The host had many friends among the merchants and was well patronized. Some years later, in 1832, the physicians in the city urged all to abstain from drinking beer and wine, and to drink pure coffee, in order to avoid the cholera, then epidemic. Browne immediately opened a large and convenient coffee-room on the first floor of the hotel, and the wonders of coffee as a sanitary beverage were highly commended. The hotel became familiarly known as Browne's Coffee-House and was a favorite dining- place. A number of merchants that dined there became known as 'the club;' such men as Thomas II. Faile, John J. Boyd, Samuel Paxon, Edward Penfold, George W. Blunt, Gilbert Davis, and other well-known. New Yorkers could daily be met there. The club has ceased to meet, but the hotel is open, and the coffee-room and restaurant are still patronized. On the south-east of what is now Pine and William streets. THE HISTORY OF COFFEE. 37 there stood from the year 1812 to 1830 the Bank Coffee-House, kept by William Niblo. Adjoining it on the rear was a garden, and the building formerly occupied by the Bank of Kew York, the first banking institution established in this city. Pine street was then lined with the residences of prominent lawyers and merchants. The houses were nearly all built of brick, with sunken areas in front. Mr. K"iblo was then a young, active man, taking great pride in the reputation of his cafe, and soon made it famous for its sappers given by Benedicts taking leave of their bachelor friends. In 1830 the Bank Coffee-House passed into other hands and was torn down, Xiblo going to Broadway and Prince street, where he opened the gardens which bore his name. The cheerful name of coffee-house has somewhat lost its siff- o nificance in IS^ew York with the establishment of the more pre tentious hotels, and in them the coffee-rooms are shorn of many pleasant associations. Within a few years a desire has been shown to establish richly appointed and well-ordered cafes, managed by chefs from sunny France. Those who early em barked in the business have enlarged their establishments, and new ones are constantly springing up in nearly every sec tion of the metropolis, especially 011 the fashionable thorough fares, and young Xew Yorkers have not been long in adopting the Parisian ideas and conveniences of the cafe, as a pleasant place to stroll in after the opera or theatre. To judge of the estimate in which coffee is held in the United States, it is only necessary to refer to the table showing the annual average consumption to see that we are by far the largest coffee-consumers in the world ; six-fold more than some of the States of Europe. Germany and France stand next to ourselves in the rank of great coffee-drinkers. vfi IT is a curious fact, that three plants connect together, three dif ferent quarters of the globe, which might otherwise have known com paratively little of each other: Arabia is linked to America and Europe by her coffee ; China, by her tea ; and tobacco has been for ages one of the connecting com mercial bonds between the two hemispheres. Before referring to the various methods of cultivation, it may not be inappropriate, briefly to describe the plant itself. Coffee, a cinchonaceous genus, CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 39 consisting of many species of tropical berry-bearing shrubs, one of which, Coffcea Arabica, — the only one which is cultivated, — is a native of Upper Ethiopia and Arabia Felix. This is the parent of the plant from whose crushed berries we derive that delightful aromatic drink called cof fee. This albuminous substance — the coffee of commerce — is to that plant what the flour is to corn, the white meat to a cocoa-nut, and the aromatic ruminated substance to the nutmeg;. It is a secretion formed in the interior o of the seed, and enveloping the embryo plant, for whose support it is destined when it first begins to germinate ; it constitutes the principal part of the seed, the embryo being itself a minute body lying in a cavity at one end of the al bumen. Linnaeus places the plant among the Pentandria, ]\£onogy- nia / its flower consists of one funnel-shaped petal, with a slender tube, nearly cylindrical, much longer than the flower- cup. It is described botanically as an ever-green shrub in its native state, having oval, shining, sharp-pointed leaves, white, fragrant, five-cleft clustered corollas, with projecting anthers, and oblong pulpy berries, which are at first of a bright red color, but afterwards become purple. The dark-green, leaves, shining brilliantly in the sun, afford a beautiful contrast to the pure white, jessamine-like blossoms that cluster and nestle among the foliage ; which ever and anon turns fitfully up with the breeze its white under-lining, and glitters like the foam- crest on the ocean wave. Its leaves resemble those of the common laurel, although not so dry and thick. From the angle of the leaf -stalks small groups of the white flowers issue, which, as already stated, resemble those of the jessamine. These flowers fade very soon, and are replaced by a kind of fruit not unlike a cherry, which contains a yellow fluid enveloping two small seeds or berries, convex upon one side, flat and furrowed 40 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. upon the other. These seeds are of a horny or cartilaginous nature ; they are glued together, each being surrounded with a peculiar coriaceous membrane. The period of flowering does not last more than two days. In a single night the blossoms expand so profusely that the trees appear as if covered with snow. The seeds are known to be ripe when the berries have a dark red color. Travellers and planters tell us that nothing can be conceived more delightful than the appearance and perfume of a coffee plantation in full bloom. The air is filled with fragrance, and the trees appear as if a shower of snow had just fallen on their dark-green glossy leaves, which are almost entirely hidden by the profusion of delicate white blossoms. This rare beauty is, however, but short-lived, — for the splendid array of the morn ing may, perchance, fade away with the heats of noon, or the mellowing tints of even. Prof. Baird, speaking of a plantation in the West Indies, says : "Anything in the way of cultivation more beautiful or more fra grant than a coffee plantation I had not conceived : and oft did I say to myself that if ever I became, from health or otherwise, a cultivator of the soil within the tropics, I would cultivate the coffee-plant, even though I did so irrespective altogether of the profits that might be derived from so doing. Much has been written, and not without justice, of the rich fragrance of an orange-grove ; and at home we ofttimes hear of the sweet odors of a bean -field. I too have often enjoyed, in the Carse of Stirling and elsewhere in Scotland, the balmy breezes as they swept over the latter, particularly when the sun had burst out with unusual strength after a shower of rain. I have likewise in Martinique, Santa Cruz, Jamaica, and Cuba inhaled the gales wafted from the orangeries ; but not for a moment would I compare either with the exquisite aromatic odors from a coffee plantation in full blow, when the hill-side, quite covered over CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 41 with the regular rows of the tree-like shrub, with their millions of jessamine-like flowers, showers down upon you as you ride up between the plants a perfume of the most delicately deli cious description. 'Tis worth going to the West Indies to see the sight and inhale the perfume." Turnbull, another authority on the subject, tells us that "the fragrance of the gardens of the Tuileries is as inferior to that of the Moorish gardens of the Alcazar, at Seville, as these last — with all the care bestowed upon them — are excelled by some neglected orange-grove in Cuba or St. Domingo. !S"or is the rich fragrance of the orange-grove to be compared for a moment with the aromatic odors of a coffee plantation, — when its hundred thousand trees have just thrown out their unrivalled dis play of jessamine-like flowers, — reminding you of what you may have read in Eastern fable of the perfumes of ' Araby the blest ! ' ' It is also amid the prodigal luxuriance and splen dors of tropical vegetation that the coffee-plant most loves to linger, loading the atmosphere with its perfumed sweets, as well as regaling the eye with its rare beauty. Xo wonder that such surpassing scenes of beauty should inspire the poet to such utterance as the following : — ' ' Earth from her lap perennial verdure pours, Ambrosial fruits and amaranthine flowers : Over wild mountains and luxuriant plains, Nature in all her pomp of beauty reigns ! Stern Winter smiles on this auspicious clime ; The fields are florid in eternal prime ; From the bleak pole no winds inclement blow, Mould the round hail, or flake the fleecy snow ; But from the breezy deep the groves inhale The fragrant murmurs of the eastern gale ! " The clustered trees of the golden Mocha in their native soil present a strange contrast, however, with the aspect of the land scape farther northward. "There," states a recent authority, 42 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. " a low, sandy shore affords a free view over vast treeless plains which stretch in sad monotony as far as the eye can reach, while the cloudless sky sends down an almost insupportable heat ; only here and there a limited pasture, with lean grass and a few graceful palm-trees, breaks the mournful uniformity ; in the grateful shade a few Bedouins rest under their black tents, while their brethren hasten on the uncouth dromedary through the yellow desert. Very different is the scene on the southern slope of the great peninsula ; for here an abundant, fragrant vegetation unfolds its riches and enchants the senses ; incense grows like the j uniper of our woods ; whole forests of palm-trees overshadow the lower parts of the mountains, and vast stretches of dnrra wave like golden grain in the gentle breeze. This is the home of the coffee-tree." Amid such profusion of natural beauty rises the graceful plant that bears the berry we so much prize. l^ot only does the plant load the air with delicious perfume, but beautiful butterflies are ever fluttering among its honeyed blossoms, suck ing sweets ; while locusts are chirping on every branch, and a cloudless blue sky looks down upon the exuberant splendor, till the blossoms fade, and become transmuted in process of time into a red berry, the kernel of which is the coffee-bean. "While these berries are maturing and becoming dark purple — such are the effects of a tropical climate — the tree produces a second and a third crop of snowy blossoms, so that the beautiful green pyramidal branches are garnished with buds, and flowers, and fruits, at every stage of development. Coffee is still cultivated in "Araby the blest," the coffee- gardens there being on terraces which reach to an elevation of about 3,000 feet. The soil is kept moist by means of small artificial canals, which are made to irrigate the whole by the water falling from the upper to the lower terraces. The trees here are planted so closely together that the thick CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 43 foliage shelters their roots from the tropical heat of the sun. Kiebuhr states that the plant was brought from Abyssinia by the Arabs to Yemen. For ages it is believed to have been cultivated in the hilly range of Jabal. Here the plants are grown in a soil continually irrigated, and where trees of various kinds are interspersed among the plantations, whose shade has a beneficial effect upon the coffee bushes. The fruit begins to ripen in February ; and when the seeds are prepared they are conveyed to the city of Beit el Fakih, whence part goes to Mocha, another portion to Hodeida and Loheia, whence it finds its way to Djedda and Suez, for the Turkish and European markets. Coffee, it has been proved, can be cultivated with great ease and to any extent in the republic of Liberia, being indigenous to the soil and found there in abundance. It bears more fruit there and lasts longer than elsewhere. A single tree at Mora via, it is said, has yielded the enormous quantity of 16 pounds at one gathering. It was estimated some years since that there were about 30,000 coffee-trees in one of the counties, that of Grand Bassa, and the quality of the produce was stated to be equal to the best Java. About the villages and settlements of the Sherbro River and Sierra Leone, wild coffee-trees are very abundant. If, as it has been computed, there are now consumed annually a thousand million pounds of the precious bean, Coffee can no longer be said to hold an insignificant place among the staples of trade. On the contrary, its impor tance as such can hardly be over-estimated, when it is remem bered to what vast multitudes of persons its cultivation, transportation, and preparation for use afford profitable means of support. There is scarcely any other item of commerce that has made 41 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. more rapid progress in the world, or gained for itself more general acceptation with all classes, than coffee. Its constantly increasing consumption as a beverage, as seen by the statistical tables, clearly proves that it may be regarded not only as one of the necessities of civilized life, but also as a very important one. Two things connected with coffee conduce to its popularity, — its refreshing, restoring, and exhilarating qualities and its non- inebriating influence. A beverage that shall be found to O O combine these essential requisites is, indeed, a sine qua non with multitudes, who, while they would seek the stimulant, would also avoid the penalty of the intoxicating draught. Coffee, therefore, is to be regarded as an auxiliary to temper ance ; since its use tends largely to supersede that of spirituous liquors. This continued increase in the demand for the bever age, irrespective of climatic influences, will of necessity extend the present area of its cultivation largely into those belts of land which are favorable to the production of the plant. These lands are found lying principally between the isothermal lines of 25° north and 30° south of the equator, as may be seen by reference to the accompanying Map. It has been ascertained that the plant cannot be grown to advantage in places where the thermometer descends at any time below 55°. Besides the existing countries where coffee is cultivated, there are many other places where it might be extensively grown, such, for instance, as the western coast of Africa generally, the interior ranges of ISTatal, the mountain ranges on the northern coast of Australia, from Moreton Bay to Torres Straits, &c. Soil and climate are the circumstances which chiefly affect its commercial value. The cultivation of coffee is now widely diffused over all the tro pical parts of the world. It is found in most of the West India Islands, in the provinces of Central America, Cayenne, Peru, Bolivia, and especially Brazil — the greatest market of all. It CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 45 is widely spread over Arabia, the western coast of India, Ceylon, Sumatra, Bourbon, Mauritius, Java, and some of the Pacific Islands; and in many of these places it is found in climates differing as much as 20° in average temperature. By reference to the Map, a bird's-eye view may be obtained of the several places where the berry is most cultivated or where it may be advantageously produced. According to M. Lascelles, " The coffee-plant will bear extremes of cli mate better than most plants. In Jamaica it is found on the Blue Mountain, upwards of 6,000 feet above the sea; and in the East Indies it is seen growing, and producing at Coonoor on the Xeilgherries, at a similar elevation ; whilst, on the other hand, it is also seen growing at the level of the sea in both hemispheres, a difference of average temperature of from 20° to 30°. It has been contended by some that the coffee produced at a high elevation is of a finer quality than that grown in a warmer temperature ; this is, however, gener ally considered questionable." " ^Vhen grown at the extremes of climate it is small, gener ally much lighter, and the actual number of berries is far less than that grown in a genial climate. Experience has proved that from lat. 6° to 12° an elevation of from 3,000 to 4,000 feet is the most suited, whilst beyond this 500 feet of elevation should be allowed for every degree of latitude. It is now an ascertained fact that much of the far-famed Mocha coffee is produced in the East Indies and shipped to Mocha ; and no in considerable portion also comes from the low land of Kaffa and Enarea, in Africa. The excellence of Mocha coffee appears to consist more in the name and method of curing than any other cause." A recent authority remarks : " It is often the case that theory is opposed to practice in upholding the idea that there is any substantial difference in the coffee grown in different countries. 46 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. Where, such difference is really found to exist, it will generally be the result of different modes of cultivation and preparation for the market, or what is known as curing. " The quantity of rain is found to exercise a material effect on the quality of the crop, and a dry climate produces a better flavored and more colory bean than the excessive moisture prevalent on some of the most highly esteemed districts, both in the eastern and western hemispheres. It may be mentioned in proof of the first of these statements, that the size and appearance of the bean have been entirely changed by improved or neglected cultivation, and in one estate in India the beans are scarcely larger than sweet-peas, owing to the proprietor having adopted a theory of never pruning the trees; whilst several estates that had been neglected have improved both in quality and quantity of produce to an extent scarcely credible since they have been manured and pruned. Seeds from Mocha, Brazil, and Java have been tried in Ceylon and India, and the produce has not differed in any respect from that of the plants already in existence there. t An excessively moist climate has further a tendency to pro duce long, weak, elongated shoots, drooping at the extremi ties, and the foliage thin, the leaf long, but devoid of sub stance. " The coffee-tree flourishes in hilly districts where its root can be kept dry while its leaves are refreshed with frequent showers. Rocky ground with rich decomposed mould in the fissures agrees best with it. Though it would grow to the height of fifteen or twenty feet, yet it is usually kept down by pruning to that of five feet, for increasing its productive ness, as well as for the convenience of cropping. It begins to yield fruit the third year, but is not generally in full bearing until the fifth. In coffee husbandry the plants should be placed eight feet apart, as the trees throw out CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 47 extensive horizontal branches, and in holes ten or twelve feet deep, to secure a constant supply of moisture. " The berries, as a general rule, when ripe are picked and spread out on large drying-grounds, and are dried with the pulp and parchment on the bean; when thoroughly dry the berries are passed under wooden rollers, or pounded in wooden mortars, and the outer skin being thus removed, the beans are winnowed, garbled, sized and packed for the market. The coffee prepared in this way is seldom so even in color and appearance, but the aroma is better. This method is, however, open to serious objections. Owing to the much greater bulk of the coffee before the pulp is removed, the room for drying would require to be very extensive, and as coffee is very liable to ferment in the pulp, it must be laid very thin, and constantly turned ; whilst in the event of wet weather or exposure to moisture, or the equally dangerous alternative of heaping it up, the whole wrould ferment and be utterly spoiled." The system pursued by most planters for removing the pulp is by machinery. After being washed and put on the barbecues to dry, it is of importance to keep the coffee constantly turned until it is all surface-dry, and the beans cease to adhere to each other, but it should not be exposed to sun or wind until the parchment cracks, as every hour's exposure to the atmosphere, after that is removed, takes away both from the color and the aroma of the bean. Of course what has been said presupposes that the coffee is picked when fully ripe, since no care in curing or packing will impart color or flavor to a half -ripe bean. For packing, casks or cases are preferable to sacks, since coffee has a strong attraction for damp and for all scents, and its aroma will also suffer by its contact with any substance with which it may be brought into connection. There are said to be 48 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. ten varieties of the coffee, but only one is found indigenous to India, and it is questionable if this is not the Mocha species introduced from Arabia. The island of Ceylon is situated in the Indian Ocean, and belongs to Great Britain. Little is known of the aboriginal inhabitants of the island; at present they resemble the Hin doos of the neighboring continent, and consist in part of Singhalese. The Singhalese spoken language is peculiar to this island; but their written language is either Pali or Sanscrit. Ceylon claims to possess historical records dating back some twenty-four centuries, and their authenticity as regards descriptions of ancient towns, buildings, and works of art is established by existing ruins, proving that the island had been at a remote period inhabited by a powerful and numerous people. Ceylon was known to the Greeks and Romans in the time of Alexander ; it was also visited by traders in the sixth century, and by Marco Polo in the thirteenth century. Little was known of it, however, until 1505, when the Portuguese established a regular intercourse with the island, being encour aged thereto by the King of Kandy, who first paid them tribute in cinnamon, to defend the island against the Arabian pirates. The Portuguese were subsequently expelled by the Dutch, who in turn were driven from the island by the British. " The total export of coffee from Ceylon in the year 1837 was valued at less than §500,000. " In 1870 the export was over 94,000,000 Ibs., equivalent to fully §17,500,000 in the consuming markets. Within the past fifteen years even the number of coffee plantations in Ceylon has increased from 404 to 1,004 ; the extent of land planted from 80,000 acres to 200,000, or over 312 square miles, and the crops have generally been favorable. This is exclusive of coffee cultivated by the natives in their gardens, supposed to cover 50,000 acres more. ' Native' coffee is the kind usually CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 49 exported from Ceylon to Europe, America, and the Australian colonies, and it is prepared for the market after a different fashion from the plantation kinds, which are generally dearer. There are now 1,000 working coffee plantations in Ceylon, requiring 200,000 coolies (men, women, and children from Southern India) to cultivate and gather crops, and worth for the 312 miles of cultivation, together with the buildings, 7 O c^ / machinery, and stock, not less than §35,000,000." The most suitable soil in the East Indies for the coffee-plant is that which grows soft timber. The latest authorities seem to confirm the opinion of Laborie, who observes : " If the first (taproot) finds the quickstone, gravel-stone, or clay, the tree will not last long ; but if it, as well as the roots, find their way through stony ground, and if there be a good proportion of mould, it suffers no inconvenience, as the stones keep the mould together." The finest estates are said to be of this latter character of soil, and have given consecutively heavy crops, with the assistance of little or no manure. While estates of a lighter soil, having lost nearly all the mould, and having no good subsoil, have to be regularly manured. In a word, a dark chocolate-colored soil, mixed with small stones, under ledges of rock, and bestrewn with boulders, is the best ; and the most favorable elevation is 3,000 feet. A level piece of virgin ground, not far from water, where the soil is rich and crumbly, is the most eligible for the construction of a nursery. First the land must be thoroughly cleared, and all but the largest stumps of the forest-trees rooted out ; the soil must be dug to the depth of nine or twelve inches, and be made as friable as possible, then divided into beds with narrow paths between them, the seed, in parchment (generally taken from the cisterns after being pulped), should be put in, row by row, about six inches apart. A rope the length of the beds is used for this purpose, stretched from one end of the beds to the 50 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. other. The seed, if sown in suitable weather, soon makes its appearance above the surface ; so that a nursery made in May or June of one year has plants fit to put out at the same date in the following year. A slightly inclined piece of land is more desirable for a nursery, because the natural drain age would be better ; and it is important that care should be taken to prevent damage by heavy rains. One bushel of parch ment coffee is calculated to yield about 30,000 plants ; so that for a clearing of 100 acres, four or five bushels of seed would be required. When the young trees in a nursery have attained a growth and age at which their being planted out as plants becomes rather a doubtful proceeding, with reference to the probability of their succeeding and taking root, it is better to make " stumps " of them : this is done by pulling them up, with as little injury as possible to the roots, and cutting them down to about six inches above the root ; then to shorten the tap-root by a careful sloping cut ; next to trim the other lateral roots, which are often needlessly extended. Filling in is the operation that follows holing. It has been ascertained by experience, that leaving the holes open for some time is very beneficial to the soil in a chemical point of view. Filling in, like every other work on a coffee estate, should be carefully superintended. But of all operations in the formation of a coffee plantation, the actual placing of the plants in the holes is the one that requires the utmost care and attention. Early planting is, of course, desirable, because the trees have the benefit of the entire rainy season, and are sure to give a larger maiden crop. The usual course of transferring the plants is as follows: when pulled up, those with crooked roots should be picked out and thrown away ; the roots should then be trimmed with a sharp knife, diminishing the length of the tap-root sufficiently to prevent the chance of its being bent or broken. The plant should not be put deeper into the CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 51 earth than it was before it was pulled up ; it should then be pressed down with the hands or firmly trodden down. A coffee plantation, to be worked effectively, requires to be well " roaded '? and drained. Drains, like roads and paths, should be cut as soon as the estate is commenced, or at all events before the trees cover the ground, or the coffee will suffer. These drains are usually about fifteen inches wide and deep, and at the distance of every twenty trees, which would be about 120 feet apart. As weeds are the bane of coffee estates, they are to be constantly cleared off, at least once a month. When the trees have been freed from suckers, and have reached twelve or eighteen months, the operation of tapping is usually commenced. The advantages for the custom are thus detailed by Laborie : " First, it brings the fruit within easy reach, and prevents the branches being broken ; secondly, the tree thereby acquires strength and vigor both below and above ground, and the stem becomes larger in circumference; thirdly, it affords less hold to the winds ; fourthly, the form of the tree is more beautiful; and fifthly, it loses none of its inferior branches, which, as nearer the source of vegetation, are better nourished, and, of course, more productive." Plant ers have observed that the part of the tree most exposed to the sun and air usually bears the heaviest clusters ; therefore the more the tree is thinned out, t'he more it bears. This is exemplified by young trees in their second and third crops, which bear very heavily, chiefly from the primaries and secondaries. Commonly, coffee-trees bear heavily one year and lightly the next. Regular pruning and searching have been found to produce the most satisfactory result. The next thing in order is the handling, which should be done twice if practicable before crop. If the force on the estate admits of it, the primings should be buried in trenches between the trees. They soon turn into vegetable mould, 52 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. and the loosening of the soil and cutting of the long fibrous roots very much invigorate the trees. In the same manner, the young wood, after the searching, may be buried with great advantage to the surrounding trees. lS"o branch should be allowed to bear more than two, or at most three crops; it should then be removed to make room for a fresh one. As the same wood never bears twice, the branches, if allowed to bear more than three crops, degenerate into mere whips, bearing only a few berries at the extremities. JXo definite rule can be given for pruning old trees, however ; as M. Sabonadiere informs us, much depends upon their condition. He states that he took charge of an estate, some portions of it at a great elevation. The trees had not been pruned for some years, and were a mass of thick cross branches and matted leaves ; a man might have made a bed on the top of them. It would never have done to reduce these trees at once to mere primaries or parrot-poles. The course pursued was to saw out the cross branches, and open out the centre of the trees about eighteen inches in circumference; then to -take off and thin out about half the remaining wood: the effect was wonderful. They were afterward handled once or twice, and the result has been a very good crop, on a property which had not yielded a remunerative one for many years. This pruning also seemed to drive away the coffee-bug, and much reduced its ravages. Only during the three or four days of blossom-time is it ad visa- able to stop pruning, otherwise much damage may be done, and the crop lost. After the blossom, and when it has set, all the more care is needed to prune with caution, the best branches being retained; while those which should have come off, even if they have crop upon them, must not be left. Sufficient pruning must be done to insure a supply of new wood, and to give health and vigor to the tree to CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 53 mature its crop. It has been effectually proved that draining to prevent wash and waste of soil, and a system of manuring wrhile the trees are still young and vigorous, tend to prolong the age of estates. There is no doubt that, under such a system, coffee-trees may have as long an existence as other evergreens ; excepting, of course, such contingencies as over-bearing, attacks of grubs, the tap-root coming in contact with rock, or becoming rotten from swampy soil ; all of which bring the tree to premature decay. For that destructive scourge, the coffee-bug, the following remedy has been tried with great success : namely, —to apply saltpetre in a finely-powdered state, dusted over the tree when wet with rain or dew. Concerning manures much has been written ; but it is found by experience that those are the best which are in general use : these consist of bone-dust, poonac, guano, lime, salts, wood- ashes, burnt clay, pulp, and last, but not least, cattle-manure. Composts should be applied above the tree in semicircular holes ; they should be filled in with any prunings or vegetable matter at hand, and then covered by the loose top soil ; the new earth from the holes should be used to cover the roots. The earth over the manure should be well trodden down, to prevent its being washed away by heavy rains, or turned up by careless weeders. The next process consists of picking, curing, and despatching the crop for market. When coolies are turned out for gathering or picking they are provided with what is called in planter- parlance a gunny-bag, holding from two to three bushels; they have also smaller sacks fastened round their waist; into these they first collect the berries, and then fill the larger vessels. "When fully ripe, the sooner the coffee is pulped the better, otherwise it heats and the color of the parchment is spoiled. In dry weather it is sometimes 54 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. necessary to sprinkle water over the cherry, and to let it soak for some hours to make it pnlpable; since if passed through the pulpers in a dry state, it would be much cut and damaged. Amongst other items to be observed in the culture of coffee, the following are of important and practical value. The fruit should be gathered in when resembling ripe cherries ; it should then be measured and thrown into a loft above the pulper in a heap. It should be submitted to the first process of machinery, the pulper, within twenty-four hours after, if not immediately. The pulped berries may remain a day and a night, for the process of fermentation; the mucilaginous matter is to be then washed off. In an hour or so the coffee may then be removed for curing : it is there spread out thinly and exposed to the sun, which will in eight or nine hours absorb all the water, and leave the coffee fit for housing. When coffee is perfectly cured — which is generally ascer tained by threshing out a few berries in one's hands, and seeing if it has attained its horny blue color — it is then fit for milling, which is the second process it has to undergo by machinery. Here the parchment and silver skins are dislodged from the berry, by means of the friction of a large roller passing over the produce in a wooden trough. It is then submitted to the fanner or winnowing machine, and the coffee passed through two or three sieves, when it comes away perfectly clean, and thus, being sized, hand- picked, and packed, it is forwarded by mules or railroad to market. A recent eastern traveller, Bickmore, informs us that in the large wooden storehouses where the coffee is received from the interior, and kept for exportation, the rich aromatic fragrance given out by the berry differs much more than any one would believe from the ordinary fragrance to CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 55 which we are accustomed. Here it is stored in bags, just as it comes in from the plantations. "In order that I might see what superior coffee the Minahassa produces," he says, "the Resident had several bags opened. I found the kernels, instead of being opaque, and having, as we usually see them, a tinge of bronze, were translucent and of a greenish-blue color. The best are those which O have these characteristics, and at the same time are very hard. One of the first plants raised at Batavia was sent to Holland, where it bore fruit, and the plants from its seeds were carried to Surinam, where they flourished, and in 1718 coffee began to be an article of export from that port. Ten years later it was introduced into the French and English islands of the West Indies, having previously been successively introduced into Java and Holland. I am told that it was first brought here from Java by a native prince, and the remarkable manner in which it thrived having attracted the attention of the officials, more trees were planted. There has been a steady increase, both in the number of trees and in the quantity of fruit they have yielded; but yet not more than one-half the number are planted that might be, if the population was sufficiently great to take care of them. With, such an enormous yield a large surplus is left in the hands of the government after it has paid the natives who cultivate it, the percentage to the chiefs, and the cost of transportation from the small storehouses in the interior to the large warehouses on the coast, from which it is put on board of vessels, for shipment to Europe and America." When Arabia enjoyed the exclusive monopoly of coffee, it was not suspected that one day the Island of Java would furnish for the use of the civilized world over 130 millions of pounds per annum. The selection of soil and situation best suited for 56 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. the growth and culture of coffee in Java, differs little essential ly from that of other oriental plantations. Yalleys lying between high mountains are preferred here for coffee-growing, because the soil which is washed down from the heights affords fresh food continually to the lowlands ; the valleys themselves are of the proper moisture, since the hills surrounding them attract the rain. The labor by which coffee is planted in Java and its produce collected is included among the oppressions or forced services of the natives, and the delivery of it into the government stores among the forced deliveries at inadequate rates. Previous to the year 1808 the cultivation of this plant was principally confined to the Sunda districts ; there were but comparatively few plantations in the eastern districts, and the produce which they wrere capable of yielding did not amount to one-tenth part of the whole, but under the administration of Marshal Daendals this plant usurped the soil destined for the subsistence of the people ; every other kind of cultivation was made subservient to it, and the withering effects of a govern ment monopoly extended their influence throughout every province of the island. In the Sunda districts each family was obliged to take care of 1,000 coffee-plants, and in the eastern districts, where new and extensive plantations were now to be formed on soils and in situations in many instances by no means favorable to the cultivation, 500 plants were the prescribed allotment. The United States and Holland are the principal markets for Java coffee, and it is distinguished into pale yellow and brown, varieties which depend on the curing and the age of the commodity, and not on the modes of culture or any differ ence in the plants which yield them. The pale coffee is the newest and lowest priced, the brown is the oldest and most esteemed. Coffee stored in Java loses the CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 57 first year 8$, the second, about 5$, and the third, about 2$, after which it continues stationary and assumes a brown color. This is the brown coffee of commerce. Recent scientific discoveries have shown that the improve ment caused by keeping Java coffee is owing to the evapora tion of the caffeic acid, which is the principle that imparts the harsh, bitter, and astringent taste, which cannot be disguis ed. It is very much the same change that takes place in fine brands of wine, which acquire their rich, mellow flavors only by age. Old government Java coffee has always been highly prized by epicures. Although there is some shrinkage in weight caused by keeping coffee for a length of time, still the great improvement and increased value more than counterbalances this loss. By carefully examining pale and brown Java coffee, much difference will be found in the smell of the raw bean. There is a particular spicy aroma about brown Java that the pale varieties never acquire until age has mellowed and chang ed their appearance. There appeared a few years ago a work bearing the title of " Max Havelaar ; or, the Coffee Auctions of the Dutch Trading Company." The author wrote under the pseudonym of Mul- tatuli ; he was an assistant resident of -the Dutch government in Java. The book appeared in the form of a novel, and treated of the incredible extortions and tyranny of which the natives of the Dutch Indies, " that magnificent empire of Insulind, which winds about the equator like a garland of emeralds," are the victims ; and how he tried in vain, while still in the service of the government, to put an end to the cruel oppressions that happen every day in those countries. Many considered it an interesting and captivating work of fiction, but the author maintained that it contained nothing but facts, and the govern- o 7 a ment was challenged to prove the substance of the work to be false ; but its truth has never been disputed. It proves that 3* 58 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. what was written of the cruelties and sufferings of American slavery, as described in Uncle Tom's Cabin, are nothing in comparison to the sufferings from the system of forced labor in the Indies. It is full of eccentricities, and the characters in troduced are original and amusing ; among others a Mr. Dry- stubble is described as the type of a Dutch coffee-broker, who knows all about coffee, and makes his life subservient to his vocation. It bears evidence throughout of having been written by a genius of that order which only appears at intervals, and it serves to throw some little light on the habits of the millions of natives who dwell in the islands of the Indian Ocean, where so large a portion of our supplies of coffee are obtained. Of late years there has been a growing desire to know more about the great coffee-producing districts in Java and Sumatra. The opening of the Pacific Railroad and the successful opera tion of the submarine cables have done much to bring about more frequent communication with these important countries. American merchants have not been slow in availing themselves of the advantages in becoming better acquainted with those who have established important houses in the East Indies, and the writer is particularly indebted to Mr. Charles Dunlop, of Singapore, and Mr. John Peet, of Batavia, for much valuable information concerning the cultivation of coffee. Both of these gentlemen recently visited this country, and from their exten sive experience they were enabled to give to those interested in the importation of coffee many interesting details concerning the manners and customs of the natives, and how the great traffic with the interior was conducted by their respective houses for their foreign constituents. Not far from Ayar-Bangis is the port to which the coffee raised in the valley of Ran, in the interior, is brought down, to be hence shipped in praus to Padang, where it is placed in the government storehouses and sold at auction four times CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 59 a year, viz., in March, June, September, and December. Natal, about twenty-five miles north of here, is the chief port to which is brought the valuable coffee raised in the fertile valley of Mandheling, of which port Elout is the capital. Mr. Bickmore refers to a portion of Sumatra where the Musi makes a great bend to the south-west and the path leads eastward over a gently rising elevation, on the top of which is a large and most thriving coffee- garden, and near by are rice-fields which yield abundantly. "This garden has been very lately planted, and yet all the trees that are old enough to bear are nearly loaded down with fruit. The rice-fields show that an abundance of food could be raised here, and the only thing that is wanting is people to do the work. The elevated sit uation of this country makes it very healthy for for eigners. If any one could obtain a grant of land here, and also the privilege of bringing a large number of Chinamen, he would certainly realize a fortune, for coffee can be here cultivated with little care; and rice, the staple article of food among that people, can be raised in any quantity. Such a privilege could not be obtained at present, but the liberal tendency of the government of the Netherlands in India promises that it may be, at no distant time in the future. Such an enterprise would not have the character of an experiment, for the facility with which coffee and rice can be grown has already been shown on this plantation, and the cost of transporting it to Padang or Palembang would be very light. Sumatra undoubtedly contains large quantities of gold, but the true source of her wealth is not the precious metal she possesses, but the cups of coffee she produces." Of Brazil, the popular idea seems to have been, that it is a place of mighty rivers and strange-looking mountains, CO CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. earthquakes, anacondas, alligators, with luxuriant fruits and flowers, palms, with gayly plumaged birds and monkeys. But it is all this and much more besides, — for its climate is perpetual summer, and its scenery the most beautiful known even to tropical regions. The empire of Brazil, although stretching over a territory nearly equal to one- half of the entire South American Continent, with a soil unsurpassed by any other in the world, yet num bers only about ten millions of inhabitants. Like most tropical countries, it does not evince the enterprise and energy so characteristic of the dwellers in higher lati tudes. The Emperor, Dom Pedro, is, however, undoubtedly inspired with progressive ideas, although his subjects seem as decidedly opposed to them ; an apathetic indifference to all kinds of innovation or improvement holds them spell bound to antiquated usages and obsolete forms. With a soil so fertile and a climate so genial, all that seems requisite is the enterprise of capitalists, and the application of the improved industrial arts, to render Brazil a centre of greatly increased and increasing commercial importance. The recent abolition of slavery by the Emperor in all Government or State works, by the substitution of free labor, is of itself a great advance in the right direction; and the ultimate extinction of slavery generally will be accomplished when the existing slaves shall have passed away, since their children are born free. When the swift railroad shall haA'e wholly superseded the slow mule conveyance, commerce will pro portion ably increase, because capitalists and free labor will yield a more profitable return. Rio de Janeiro is distant from New York about four thousand eight hundred miles ; that distance, however, might be virtually much reduced by the establishment of more frequent intercourse with it by steamers. Railroads are already in operation, to some extent, CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 61 under the sanction of the government ; and there are others projected. But we have not spoken of the remarkable beauty of the city, and especially of the Bay of Rio de Janeiro, which for picturesque scenery has been thought by some to rival even the peerless Bay of Naples. The former, which is en tered by a narrow rocky portal, spreads out into an immense harbor, or inland lake, extending a distance of some score of miles, from north to south. Passing the Sugar-loaf at the entrance of the bay, you catch a view of the vast expanse of water and the distant succession of mountain-peaks which enclose it, and which form a magnificent amphitheatre. They are called the Organ Mountains, from their seeming resemblance to the pipes of an organ. Their height averages from six to seven thousand feet. The name Rio de Janeiro, literally, river of January, which is really a misnomer, it being a bay, not a river, took its rise from the tradition that it wras discovered in that month, which is to the dwellers in that clime the hottest of their year. In close proximity with the city is the celebrated Botanical Garden, called Bota Foga, which is rich in all kinds of rare exotics, including the banyan-tree, and has a splendid avenue of palms. Brazil, indeed, has been called the land of the Cocoa and the Palm ; but it may with equal propriety be also designated the land of the coffee-tree; since, as we have already intimated, it is the great producing country whence we derive our principal supply of that essential to our domestic economy. Coffee, although a native of the Old World, has long been one of the most important staples of the New. Meyen states that he even found some coffee-trees growing wild in Brazil, not far from Rio Janeiro, in the woods of Corcovado. It is the great commercial staple of the empire of Brazil, which, 62 CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. beyond comparison, is now the greatest coffee producing country of the globe. Java is the next in order, and although the lat ter does not yet contribute one-half the quantity of the former, yet it furnishes nearly three times as much as other markets. The United States alone imported from Brazil, in 1871, over two hundred million pounds of Rio coffee. (See Table.) The first coffee-tree in Brazil was planted in 1754, by Friar Yillaso, in the garden of the San Antonio Convent at Rio de Janeiro. Brazil was then governed by the Marquis de Lavradio, as "Viceroy. The first fruits of the tree were presented to the Marquis, who distributed them among the planters, explaining to them the advantages of adding another valuable article of produce to the country ; but, strong in their prejudices in favor of sugar and indigo, few took any pains to cultivate it, and the progress of increase was so slow and gradual, that in 1808, when Don Joas YI. fled from Portugal to Rio de Janeiro, and soon after opened the port for foreign trade, the annual crop of coffee did not exceed 30,000 bags of 160 pounds each. The increase until 1820 was very moderate, the crop then being about 100,000 bags. The high prices ruling in Europe, caused by the falling off in production and increase of consumption all over the world, stimulated the planters of Brazil to extend their cultivation of coffee, espe cially as the price of sugar had declined, and indigo, from its inferior quality, became neglected ; also that much less capital was required for the cultivation of coffee. The importation of slaves at that time wTas great, prices low, and they were sold to planters on long credits, payment being received for them in produce. This enabled those of small means to buy estates. Crops being abundant, and favorable prices obtained, they were soon able to pay off their debts, and establish the custom of credit which was denied to sugar planters, as that staple became unprofitable when brought into competition with Cuba, CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 63 Porto Rico, and other sugar-producing countries. It is to be observed that while the cultivation of sugar was declining in Brazil, and coffee increasing and superseding it, in Cuba coffee was falling off rapidly and sugar annually increasing. We now find at the present time that there is hardly enough coffee raised in Cuba to supply the consumptive demand, and the importation of Java and Rio coffees has been found necessary to supply the increasing wants of the inhabitants of one of the principal producing countries of former times. It was not, however, until after the Haytian insurrection that coffee became an object of great cultivation and commerce in Brazil. In 1809 the first cargo, consisting of 1522 bags, was sent to Salem, in the United States, per ship Marquis de Someruelas, and all the coffee raised in the empire in that year scarcely amounted to 30,000 sacks, while in the Brazilian financial year of 1ST1 there were exported over two million sacks. The great importance which coffee has acquired of late years as a staple of commerce, very naturally suggests the inquiry as to the best means of still further promoting its culture. Since the sugar plantations of the West Indies have so largely super seded those of coffee, attention has been directed to other geo graphical points suited to its growth. Until the era of the French revolution, the cultivation of coffee could scarcely be said to have reached the South American continent ; till then it was in a great measure confined to Arabia and the Caribbean Archipelago. Its extreme scarcity during the Napoleonic wars enhanced its price so enormously, that on the first announce ment of peace, in 1814, many coffee-plantations were formed on the Costa Firme of South America, along the Brazilian shores of that continent, and even on the southern coast of Africa. Not content, however, with the natural increase of the demand now so universally made for this important berry, France, England, and America seem to have entered into a friendly al- 6-i CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IX VARIOUS COUNTRIES. liance in endeavoring to stimulate yet further the production by means of premiums for the most improved machinery and inventive skill devoted to its culture and preparation. The great coffee region is on the banks of the Rio Parahiba and in the province of San Paulo ; but every year it is more widely cultivated, and a considerable quantity is now grown in provinces farther northward. It can be planted by burying the seeds or berries (which are double), or by slips. The plants which have been taken from the nursery with balls of mould around their roots will bear fruit in two years ; those detached from the earth will not produce until the third year, and the majority of such shrubs die. In the province of San Paulo and the richest portions of Minas-Geraes one thousand trees will yield from 2,560 to 3,200 pounds; in Rio de Janeiro, from 1,600 to 2,560. In some parts of San Paulo, one thousand trees have yielded 6,400 pounds; but this is rare. In the province of Rio de Janeiro, trees are generally cut down every fifteen years ; there are some cafiers^ however, which continue to bear several years longer. As a general rule they are not allowed to exceed eight feet in height, so as to be in reach. There are three gatherings in the year, and the berries are spread out upon pavements, or level portion of ground (the terreno), whence they are taken when dry, and denuded of the hull by machinery, and afterward conveyed to market. In Brazil, coffee is planted in the following manner : " The fresh beans are sown generally in the shade of coffee-trees, and the little plants are taken up, with the earth about them, so soon as they have reached the height of twelve inches. They are so planted that the stems are from four to six feet apart. By cutting off the rankest shoots, the coffee-trees in plantations are prevented becoming more than twelve feet in height, that the fruit which ripens in the 20th, or even not till the 32d month after the transplantation, may be the more easily CULTIVATION OF COFFEE IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 65 plucked. After four or five years the crop is very good, and then one servant is kept for every 1,000 plants. The coffee- tree yields three crops annually, which furnish employment for almost the whole year. METHODS OF MAKING COFFEE. IT may seem almost superfluous to devote a chapter to the discussion of the best method of making a cup of coffee ; but since more depends upon the manner in which it is made than is usually imagined, it may not be inappropriate to offer a few words upon the subject. We propose, therefore, to allude briefly to the many modes which have been resorted to for preparing and making coffee, both at home and abroad. While wre do not deny the ad vantages of many of the following methods, it is believed that the process of distillation, by the direct application of steam heat, as fully described in the closing remarks of this chapter, is eventually destined to be the universal favo rite. First of all, before speaking of the manner of pre paring the berry as a beverage, we will mention that the leaf of the coffee-plant is used in the Eastern Archipel ago by the natives as a substitute for tea. They roast the leaves over a clear, smokeless fire, after which they are picked from the twigs, and when immersed in boiling water they form an agreeable drink. A few years ago the attention of the scientific world was drawn to this subject, in the first instance, by Brande, and subsequently by Ward, in his able papers published in the Singapore Free Press and elsewhere. He seems to claim for roasted coffee-leaves a value unsurpassed by the berry itself. " It was well known," he says, " that they had been long employed in Sumatra under the name of coffee-tea." METHODS OF MAKING COFFEE. 67 That this preparation contains a considerable amount of the nutritious element of coffee is evident from the analysis ; but as the leaves can only be collected in a good state at the expense of the coffee-plant, it is doubtful whether the coffee produced by the berries be not, after all, the cheapest, as it certainly is the best. In Arabia we find the method of preparing and using coffee very interesting. Palgrave, in his recent work, gives full and entertaining descriptions of the manners and customs of the people and their great fondness for coffee. He thus describes an Arabian dwelling and their method of making coffee : — " The walls are colored in a rudely decorative way and sunk here and there into small triangular recesses, destined to the reception of books, lamps, and other such like objects. The roof of timber, and flat ; the floor strewed with fine clean sand, and garnished all around alongside of the walls with long strips of carpet, upon which cushions, covered with silk, are disposed at suitable intervals. In poorer dwellings felt rugs usually take the place of carpets. "In one corner, that farthest removed from the door, stands a small fireplace or furnace, formed of a large square block of granite or some other hard stone ; this is hollowed inwardly into a deep funnel, open above, and communicating below with a small pipe-hole, through which the air passes, bellows-driven, to the lighted charcoal ; the water in the coffee-pot placed upon the funnel's mouth is thus readily brought to boil. This system of coffee furnaces is universal, and this corner of the dwelling or IVliawah, as it is called, is considered the place of distinction, whence honor and coffee radiate by progressive degrees round the apartment; and hereabouts accordingly sits the master of the house himself, or the guests whom he especially delights to honor. 68 METHODS OF MAKING COFFEE. " On the broad edge of the furnace stands an ostentatious range of coffee-pots, varying in size and form ; some are very tall and slender, with several ornamented circles and mouldings in elegant relief. The number of these utensils is sometimes extra vagantly great ; as many as a dozen at a time may be seen in a row by one fireside, though coffee -making requires only three at most. Five or six are considered to be the thing ; but when doubled it indicates the riches and munificence of the owner, by implying the frequency of his guests and the large amount of coffee that he is in consequence obliged to have made for them. Behind sits a slave, whose name is generally a diminu tive, in token of affection ; his occupation is to make and pour out the coffee. On entering, it is proper to say 'Bismillah,' i. , gold 5 cts. 1862— All substitutes (except Chiccory), by Act of Congress, July 14, 1862, section 8 : — on Acorn Coffee and Dandelion root, raw or prepared, and all other articles used or intended to be used as Coffee, or a substitute for Coffee, and not otherwise provided for, shall pay per Ib, gold 3 cts. 1864 — Chiccory root, by Act of June 30, 1864, section II., raw, per Ib, gold 4 cts. Chiccory ground, burnt, or prepared, per Ib, gold 5 cts. 1866— Section sixth of Act passed March 3, 1866. On all goods, wares, and merchandise of the growth or produce of countries east 96 TARIFFS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places west of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of ten per centum, ad- valorem, in addition to the duties imposed on any such arti cle when imported directly from the place or places of their growth or production 10% (This act took effect April 1, 1866.) 1870— By Act of Congress, July 14, 1870, section 21, coffee reduced after January 1, 1870, to per ft), gold 3 cts. 1873— Act of May 1, 1872, Coffee placed upon the free list from July 1, 1872 Free 18-72 — Act of June 6, 1872, Chiccory root, ground or unground, per ft). 1 ct. On and after October 1, 1872, on all goods, wares, and mer chandise of the growth or produce of countries east of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places west of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of ten per centum, ad -valorem, in addition to the duties imposed on any such article, if any, when imported directly from the place or places of their growth or production 10$ Total consumption in 1871, 316,609,765 R>s. GREAT BRITAIN. NOTE. — The duties on coffees in foreign countries have been reduced to TJ. S. gold, per B> avoirdupois, in conformity with the United States revenue laws in force at the New York Custom House. 1660 — In this year we find the first mention of Coffee on the statute books of Great Britain, when a duty of four pence was laid upon every gallon of Coffee, made and sold, to be paid by the maker. Equal per gallon to 8 cts. 1789 — Coffee from British possessions 21 cts. Coffee from East Indies 49 cts. Total consumption, 930,141 ft>s. 1801— Coffee from British possessions 35 cts. East Indies 62| cts. Total consumption, 750,000 Ibs. 1820 — Of any British possession in America or Africa 24 cts. From any place within the limits of the East India Co.'s charter 36 cts. All others 60| cts. Total consumption, 7,000,000 ft>s. 1835 — Of any British possession in America or within the limits of the East India Company's, Charter, or of Sierra Leone 12 cts. TARIFFS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 97 Imported from any British possession within the limits of the East India Company's Charter, not being- the produce thereof. 18 cts. Imported from any other place within those limits 25 cts. Otherwise 30 cts. Total consumption, 23,000,000 Ibs. 1340 — Of any British possession in America or within the limits of the East India charter or Sierra Leone 12| cts. Imported from any British possession within the limits of the East India Charter, not being the produce thereof 19 cts. Imported from any place within those limits 25 f cts. Otherwise 31^,- cts. Total consumption, 28,000,000 Ibs. 1857— Raw from all parts 6 cts. Kiln-dried, roasted and ground 8 cts. Total consumption, 34,334,000 Ibs. 1871— Same rates 6 cts. Estimated total consumption in 1871, 40,000,000 Ibs. The above are some of the most important changes in the tariff of Great Britain. FRANCE. 1872— Coffee, present duty per Ib 5^ cts. Coffee in French vessels 4^ cts. SPAIN. Coffee the produce of, and coming1 direct from any Spanish possession If ct. Coffee the produce of, and coming- from foreign countries 2£ cts. Extract, Essence, and other compounds of Coffee, fifteen per cent, ad-valorem 15$ PORTUGAL. Coffee in the shell If ct. Coffee cleaned 2i cts. All imitations, including chiccory, also Coffee roasted or ground 2-fc cts. TARIFF ON EXPORT OF COLONIES. Coffee from Cape Verde 1 ct. Coffee from Angola i ct. Coffee from St. Thome and Principe i ct. ITALY. Coffee of all kinds 4 ffc cts. 98 TARIFFS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. GERMAN ZOLLVEREIN. Coffee, green 3| cts. Coffee, roasted 5 cts. AUSTRIA. Coffee, green 3^ cts. Coffee, roasted or burnt 4^- cts. On all substitutes 3^- cts. SWITZERLAND. Coffee 3 cts. BELGIUM. Coffee, green 1£ ct. Coffee, roasted If ct. DENMARK. Coffee 2J- cts. Extracts, forty per centum ad -valorem 40$ NORWAY. Coffee 4& cts. Extracts, forty per centum ad-valorem 40$ SWEDEN. Coffee 2fcte. On any preparation or substitute 4 cts. RUSSIA. Coffee in the bean 3 cts. TURKEY. Coffee, eight per centum ad-valorem 8$ VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA). Coffee and chiccory 4 cts. NEW SOUTH WALES. Coffee and chiccory 4 cts. NEW ZEALAND. Coffee. . 6 cts. TARIFFS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 99 BRITISH COLUMBIA. Coffee, raw ............................................... 3 cts. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. Coffee .................................................... 3 cts. JAMAICA. Coffee .................................................... 5 cts. BRITISH HONDURAS. Coffee .................................................... 2 cts. ISLAND OF ST. CROIX. Coffee, twelve and one-half per cent, ad- valorem ............. 12^ ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Coffee, twenty-five per cent, ad- valorem ..................... 25$ CHINA AND JAPAN. Coffee .................................................... Free CEYLON. Coffee. . . Free 100 STATISTICAL TABLES OF COFFEE. Table showing the Imports and Consumption of Coffee in the United States. IMPORTS. CONSUMPTION. 1871 322,700,479 Ibs. 316,609,765 Ibs. 1870 282,540,737 " 280,911,672 " 1869 24.2,609,255 " 243,441,117 " 1868 238 012 079 " 223 200 937 " 1867 . . 226 322 811 " 203 506 671 " 1866 165392983 " 159918,881 " 1865 133,574,397 " 128,146,356 '• 1864 145,304,957 " 109,086,703 " 1863 75269417 u 79,719,641 " 1862 98,558,680 " 88,989,911 " 1861 182,244,627 " 187,045,786 " I860 185,779,689 " 177,111,993 " 1859 248,527,306 " 226,610,300 " 1858 227,656 186 " 251,255,099 " 1857 . . . 217 871 839 " 172,565,934 " 1856 230,913,150 " 218,225,490 " 1855 238,214,533 " 218,378,287 " 1854 182,473,853 " 179,481,083 " 1853 193,112,300 " 175,687,790 " 1852 '205,542,855 " 204,991,595 " 1851 . . . 216 043,870 " 184,225,700 " STATISTICAL TABLES OF COFFEE. 101 Table showing the Consumption of the Ports of the United States. TAKEN FROM 1871. 1870. 1869. 1868. New York 157,842,920 Ibs. 151,901,952 Ibs. 148,595,172 Ibs. 148 220 831 Ibs Baltimore 88,252,945 " 34,647,550 " 81,365,545 •' 26,116,970 " 56,731,710 " 19 676,312 " 39,890,900 " 17 248 880 " Boston Philadelphia Other Ports 9,227,700 " 5,441,130 " 21,197,520 " 8,394,560 " 1,941,945 " 11,190,700 "• 6,457,963 " 4,347,420 " 7 632 540 " 4,705,046 " 8,030,360 " 5 104 9°0 " Total 316,609,705 " 280,911,672 " 243,441,117 " 223,200,937 " Increase 1871 over 1870 35,698,093 Ibs. 1870 " 1869 37,470,555" 1869 " 1868 20,240,180" Total increase three years 93,408,828 Ibs. Table showing the Consumption of the various Idnds of Coffee in the United States for the year 1871. Of Brazil 244,809,600 Ibs. Of Java, Sumatra, and Singapore, including receipts direct and from Europe 27,776,000 " Of Maracaibo 14,784,000 " Of Laguayra 8,084,000 " Of Ceylon 5,824,000 " Of St. Domingo 4,144,000 " Of Other West Indies 4,480,000 " Of Central American, Mexican, and other foreign 6,728,165 " 316,609,765 Ibs. 102 STATISTICAL TABLES OF COFFEE. Table showing the Shipments of Coffee from the Ports of Rio de Janeiro and Santos. UNITED STATES. EUROPE. ELSEWHERE. From Rio de Janeiro 1871-2.... 172,804,960 Ibs. 89,364,160 Ibs. 10,701,440 Ibs. u 1870-1.... 238,106,880 " 157,110,080 " 10,380,000 " " 1869-70... 186,296,480 " 125,391,520 " 11,347,200 " From Santos 1871-2.... 12,825,440 " 41,630,080 " " 1870-1 .... 12,288,160 " 50,178,080 " " 1869-70... 13,334,400 " 64,777,600 " Table showing the yearly average Prices of Coffee at New York. 1871. im 1869. Brazil, Fair to Prime Cargoes. . . 15^/o per. Ib. 21-i9- cts. 16-ftft,- per. Ib. 21TLo9d " cts. 15-*0% per. Ib. ^roff " 16-ASr 17T\fu- " IT-iVfr " 13150% " 14^0 "i8A " RETURN TO: CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 198 Main Stacks LOAN PERIOD 1 Home Use 2 3 4 5 6 ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS. Renewals and Recharges may be made 4 days prior to the due date. Books may be renewed by calling 642-3405. DUE AS STAMPED BELOW. JUN 1 5 200 3 FORM NO. DD6 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY 50M 5-02 Berkeley, California 94720-6000 GENERAL LIBRARY - U.C. BERKELEY BDDDclfl7M73 vr^ / i / ^ i TL fa I DO i