Empress of China — the Chinese Trade That Began in 1784

Given all the economic damage being done by needless trade wars, it seems worthwhile to recall the ship that opened the trade with the United States’ first trading partner, China. The new nation had won the Revolutionary War but had lost much of its foreign trade. The economy slumped. The American banker Robert Morris decided to venture into new markets. If the British wouldn’t sell Americans tea from India, then Americans would buy tea from China. He hired a newly built privateer, renamed the ship the Empress of China, and outfitted her for commerce. 

On February 22, 1784, Washington’s birthday and just over a month after Congress ratified the peace treaty, the Empress of China sailed from New York harbor bound for Canton. The Empress carried cargoes worth $120,000 including lead, 2,600 animal skins, fine camel cloth, cotton, Spanish silver coins, and a few barrels of pepper. The ship also carried 30 tons of ginseng, a root that grew wild in North America and was considered by the Chinese to have healing properties.

The Empress returned to New York on May 11, 1785, after a round voyage of 14 months and 24 days.  She carried a return cargo of 800 chests of tea, 20,000 pairs of nankeen trousers and a huge quantity of porcelain. Newspapers announced her return, and stores up and down the East Coast sold her cargo. The return to her investors was 25%, less than had been hoped but enough to encourage others to invest in further trading with China. 

Trade with China helped to build the new nation and would contribute to making the United Staes a major maritime power in the 19th century.  It is indeed a pity how little today’s politicians have learned from history. 

Comments

Empress of China — the Chinese Trade That Began in 1784 — 7 Comments

  1. Most politicians are too wrapped up in their own egos and desire for power, not to mention any loot they can grab on their journey, to worry about the consequences of their actions or whether history is repeating itself.

  2. I remember when Richard Nixon shocked the country by announcing he was going to visit China, and opened up the trade relations with what was, at the time, or so we thought, one of our worst enemies.

  3. I also remember when British Columbia Canada began developing ginseng farms. I thought it was native to China. As this article points out, it is actually native to North America.

  4. Long and may be over the head of some readers

    The National Center for Biotechnology Information advances science and health by providing access to biomedical and genomic information.

    Chapter 8
    Biological Activities of Ginseng and Its Application to Human Health
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK92776/