In 1802, several country ships arrived in London from Bengal, their lascar crews having suffered severe casualties due to fatigue, exposure, and starvation. Aboard the Union, the officers' treatment of the crew was so bad that the lascars and a sympathetic English sailor alerted the East India Company. Their testimony, recorded by the Company's Committee of Shipping, provides new insights into lascar living and working conditions - in particular the problem of undermanning ships - reminding us how the management-labour dynamic aboard a ship at sea always favoured owners and officers rather than workers.
CITATION STYLE
Frey, J. W. (2014, July 3). Getting away with murder: The wrongful deaths of lascars aboard the union in 1802. International Review of Social History. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020859014000327
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