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Indian Hemp
and the Dope Fiends of Old England
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A sociopolitical
history of cannabis and the British Empire 1840-1928
Sean Blanchard & Matthew J. Atha MSc
When
the report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission (IHDC) reached
1890's England it met official and public apathy. There was no
political debate. It went into the 'forget about this' file on
arrival and has stayed there ever since. There was no publicity;
The news
that "Ganja is not appreciably harmful" was of no concern
to the majority of users, who took cannabis products for their
medical benefits. The non-medical users were mostly artists who
didn't mind a little harm.
Prohibitionist
sentiment was concentrated on the opium trade between India and
China and on alcohol at home. Cannabis use in England was considered
negligible, and the authorities were content to have no laws at
all controlling it for another thirty years.
When
laws were later proposed, the Government paid no attention to
the evidence in their possession from the IHDC. In India, the
recommendations of the IHDC report for control by taxes rather
than prohibition went into force quietly, standardising laws and
tariffs on cannabis in all the provinces.
In March
1895, the Indian Government passed a resolution after reviewing
the report. It said that for the last twenty years their policy
had been of "restraining use and improving the revenue by
the imposition of suitable taxation" and "imposing as
high a rate of duty as can be levied without inducing illicit
practices" on the grounds that "the best way to restrict
the consumption of drugs is to tax them..." So, "to
that policy the Governor-general... has decided steadily to adhere."[1]
There
was never any suggestion that the same rules might be applied
in the UK; the Empire didn't work like that. The Governor-general
(also known as Viceroy), Lord Landsdowne, was appointed by the
UK Government. When they instructed him to commission a report,
he did so, then accepted or rejected it, passed any regulations
needed, and told the UK what he'd done. His job was to 'keep natives
in their place' and help the British get on with de, not to give
advice on home affairs.
From
Mother's Friend to Opium Wars
Cannabis
was virtually irrelevant to 19th century England. The drug of
the century was opium, freely available to the British population
and so popular that the government went to war to prevent the
prohibitionist Chinese disrupting the trade. The opium wars still
wrote their history in the 1990s, as Britain was soon due to hand
back Hong Kong, the territory it won from China and those territories
leased for 150 years, in 1997.
Thomas
De Quincy, in his 'Confessions of and English Opium Eater' gave
the first popular account of the '...marvellous agency of opium,
whether for pleasure or pain'. He may have been the first glamouriser
of the psychotropic effects of the drug, but, for most people
opium was a friend and medicine as indispensable as aspirin or
Valium in the 20th century.
Godfrey's
cordial, or chemists' home-brewed versions of popular patent medicines,
were used to quiet children, while no home would be without laudanum
(alcoholic tincture of opium). Opium was first used in the treatment
of cholera in the epidemics of the early 19th century, and continued
to be used for the treatment of diarrhea and sickness, common
complaints in the less than hygienic environment of the day.
It was
during the Crimean war that the analgesic effects were fully exploited,
and it is certain that the widespread use of laudanum, Collis
Browne's mixture or other opium-based medicines, available to
the poor for a penny a bottle, enabled ordinary people to cope
with the harsh realities of life in Dickensian England. From the
government's point of view, it was no doubt preferable to have
the poor in a state of comfortable stupor than rioting on the
streets.
India
was not the main source of opium for the domestic market. Most
of this was grown in Turkey or Persia (Iran), as this opium was
of generally high qualify, and trade flourished in the period
following the end of the Napoleonic wars, particularly after the
treaty of Balta Limon (1838) granting the Ottoman Empire 'most
favoured nation' trading status[2]. Indian opium, however, was
responsible for one of the British Government in India becoming
the largest drug-trafficking syndicate in the world during the
latter part of the century.
Opium
and tea were the mainstays of the British East India Company,
who had a monopoly on the opium produced in Bengal. In 1772 Warren
Hastings, then chief executive of the company, realised the potential
for foreign revenue in exporting Indian opium to China. Opium
had been known in China for centuries, but
Imports
bad been banned in 1729 by decree of the Emperor. An foreign trade
was funneled through Canton, opium being smuggled with legitimate
consignments in British ships, and sold through corrupt officials
to an eager market Other traders smuggled opium to China overland,
and the consumption spread to all levels of society, even to the
personal retinue of the Emperor. Exports to China rose from 10,000
chests ill 1820 to 40,000 chests in 1840. By 1836, a Chinese official
in Canton, Hsu Nal-chi, petitioned the emperor to legalise the
trade after witnessing the failure of prohibition... "the
severer the interdicts against (opium) became, the more widely
do the evils therefrom spread." He was summarily dismissed
from his post and replaced with a committed "war on drugs"-minded
individual, Lin Tse-hsu.
Lin was
determined to wipe out the opium trade by threatening the British
merchants with the loss of the tea trade, and in 1839 forced them
to surrender 20,000 chests of the drug. Captain Charles Elliot
the British Chief Superintended, retaliated by ordering all British
ships out of the Canton estuary, transferring the tea trade to
American ships who would transport their cargoes to Hong Kong,
an inconvenience, but not an obstacle, to the trade. Instead of
using Canton, smugglers would take opium consignments ashore up
and down the coast in sinall boats, fast enough to evade
the Customs craft. Meanwhile Elliot had ordered an expeditionary
force of naval steamships which arrived in 1840 and put direct
pressure on Peking. Lin was dismissed and the trade continued
uninterrupted following the Chinese capitulation and the end of
the first opium war in 1842. To the domestic audience in the UK,
Palmerston, the Prime Minister, bad portrayed the war as an attempt
to force the Chinese to accept free trade. In reality, the only
commodity directly involved was -opium, tax revenue from which
was becoming increasingly important to the Indian Government [3].
In Britain,
the Conservative opposition was not satisfied with Palmerston's
explanations and they opposed the opium trade in the 1840 Commons
debate. By the time they took power in 1841 their tune had changed,
and the trade continued to expand.
The Chinese
government was effectively warned that no British ships should
be searched. Although fresh edicts against the drug were issued
by the Chinese, they were powerless to stop the trade following
the treaty of Nanking, which ceded Hong Kong to Britain, allowing
a bridgehead for further opium supplies. In 1856, following growing
and-British sentiment, the Chinese gave the British government
a further excuse for war by seizing the Arrow, a British
vessel with a crew of Chinese criminals anchored off Canton. The
fact that the Arrow's registration had expired, technically
justifying the Chinese action, was overlooked by Palmerston, once
again the Liberal Prime Minister after fighting an election forced
by government defeat on an opposition motion condemning the war,
and winning on a wave of patriotic fervour.
Lord
Elgin was dispatched with an expeditionary force which burned
down the Summer Palace in Peking to impress upon the Emperor the
need to keep agreements. The main consequence of the Second Opium
War was that China was forced to legalise the trade in opium,
and were only permitted to tax the product at a level acceptable
to the British. Consumption increased from 60,000 chests in 1860
to 105,000 by 1880. The trade generated taxes to the British Indian
Government equivalent to over half their total revenue, enough
to cover the entire civil service and armed forces budgets. In
this climate, financial expediency, as so often is the case, took
precedence over the growing moral arguments against the drug trade.
Following
increased public pressure to end the trade, and in response to
a Parliamentary motion, the Government called a Royal Commission
on the production and consumption of opium, which was only to
consider prohibition among other options, after full investigation.
It was during these manoevres that the IHDC was also established.
The Indian Viceroy, Lord Lansdowne was against anything that might
disrupt business. Prime Minister Gladstone was much more pro trade
than he was anti drug. They packed the opium commission with pragmatists
from the Indian Civil Service, with some of the more economically
literate abolitionists, and ensured that it would concentrate
a good deal on money. It first met in September 1893 and saw 2,500
witnesses by February '94.
When
the report was published in '95, it said that opium was "generally
used in moderation", and "led to no evident ill-effects".
Even some senior anti-opiumists had been convinced. The fact that
Chinese missionaries were overwhelmingly critical of the effects
of opium, in contrast to the Indian witnesses who were predominantly
favourable towards the drug, was put down to the fact that in
India the drug is normally taken orally, whereas in China it was
generally smoked [3]. There was only one dissent; Joseph Rowntree,
one of the committee members, was later to denounce the Commission's
report as a whitewash. By that time there was another election
under way. Prohibition had no chance under the Conservatives,
and there would be no Liberal government until 1905.(4). The government,
despite public opinion, was determined to continue the opium
"The Lunatic
asylums are filled with Ganja Smokers."
The
question of cannabis occasionally cropped up as an incidental
issue in skirmishes during the long legislative battle against
the opium business. As early as 1840 the pro-opium banker William
Bingham Baring MP told the Commons that if the opium trade were
suppressed then there would be a danger of users turning to drugs
"infinitely more prejudicial to physical health and energy
than opium". Baring, one of 10 MPs of both parties from the
same pro-free trade family, was particularly concerned about "an
exhalation of the Hemp plant, easily collected at certain seasons,
which is in every way more injurious than
the use of the poppy." [3] This was another justification
for the lucrative opium trade which flourished in a climate of
official and unofficial governmental encouragement. However, attitudes
were slowly changing and in 1875 Mark Steward MP had proposed
that the Indian Governor General be instructed to investigate
the opium trade "with a view to gradual withdrawal,"
and lost by 37 votes. Similar moves were regularly defeated for
the next twenty years. By April '91, a spokesman for the Society
for Suppression of the Opium Trade (SSOT) had obtained a 30-vote
majority for a motion that the Governments' revenue from opium
was "Morally indefensible".
On
16 July 1891 Stewart asked a three part question about ganja [5]:
"i
Whether the Secretary of State for India has seen a report in
the Allahabad Pioneer of 10 May that ganja, which is grown sold
and excised in much the same way as opium, is far more harmful,
and that "the lunatic asylum of Bengal are filled with ganja
smokers."
ii Is
he aware that ganja has been made illegal in Lower Burma and that
excise reports say this has been 'of enormous benefit to the people.'
iii
Will he call to the attention of the Governor General the desirability
of extending theprohibition to other provinces?"
The answers
to which were yes, yes, and that he would "Enquire whether
further steps should be taken to limit consumption..."
On 7
August 1892 those enquiries were answered at some length. The
Viceroy's office told London that the whole question had been
extensively discussed with provincial administrations in 1871-73.
They sent 174 pages of old dispatches from Indian provincial governments
to the centre, and from there to London. After considering these,
"The Governor General is of the opinion that while ganja
may be among the most noxious of all intoxicants commonly used
in India... even if absolute prohibition could be enforced, the
result might be to induce the use of more noxious drugs"
(e.g. datura). Apart from which it would be impossible to enforce
a prohibition. It was "Our duty to restrict consumption,
but unnecessary to do more than persevere in the policy established
In 1873." These papers languished unread in London, perhaps
because there was a general election going on.
The
1873 dispatches showed the pragmatism of imperial administrators
which was to be repeated by the IHDC, in very similar words. The
then Viceroy had said that while the Government should endeavour
to restrict the use of ganja, it would be impossible to enforce
general prohibition, especially because of religious feelings
in some groups and because the plants grew freely some areas.
It would be inexpedient to order what could not be enforced...
"It does not appear to the Governor-general to be specifically
proved that hump incites to crime more than other drugs or spirits."
There was also some evidence that hump, "usually so noxious",
might usefully be taken for medical reasons. There was no doubt
that habitual use tended to cause insanity but not in very many
cases relative to the numbers of the insane.(6]. "General
opinion seems to be that the evil effects of Ganja have been exaggerated.
The dispatches
from regional governments were more
forthright. The Lt.-Governor of the Punjab wrote that considering
the practicalities, they should not restrict hemp drug use unless
there was proof of connection with crime. Civil, police and medical
officers disagreed on the details but: "His Honour is of
the opinion that if people were prohibited from using preparations
of hemp or opium, they would, in all probability, have recourse
to some other stimulant, such as alcohol, the crime resulting
from the use of which would be much greater than that resulting
from the abuse of these drugs .... It seems that the amount of
crime, violent or other, incited by ganja, is exceedingly small...
If, therefore, these preparations have no effect on crime and
only injure the persons who use them, it is difficult to see in
what manner the law can restrict their use in a country where
opium is a monopoly of the Government, the effects of which are
perhaps as injurious when taken in excess as those of hemp."
The local
governments of Mysore, Hyderbad, Oudh, and Burma said that as
hump drugs were little used locally, not necessary. Central Provinces
sent plenty of data but no opinions. The Northwest Provinces (later
Pakistan), one of the main cannabis growing areas, said the evidence
on crime was confused, where if the situation was bad as supposed
there would surely be a consensus. To stop production would be
almost impossible, so they could not recommend attempts to limit
or stop consumption. Bombay, Madras, and Bengal said that restrictions
and taxes already in place should be preserved. All agreed excessive
use to be somehow connected with physical harm and perhaps insanity,
but the numbers harmed were very small.
Bengal
sent the most information. Asked if a particularly popular type
of local ganja was more deleterious than others, they submitted
a long report on cultivation, uses and profit margins on all hemp
products by Dr Watt, State Reporter on Economic Products. Their
local product was popular due to the quality of plants and traditional
production skills, rather than sheer strength. A table of samples
analysed for "Resinous extracts or Cannabin" ranged
from 1.4% (NW Province) to 12% (Madras), mostly about 4% [7].
All of the legal trade was inside India. The state of Bengal had
been making an average 1 million rupees per year through the 1860's
in tax on ganja shops and duty at government auctions, about £100,000
- tens of millions in today's money.
When
these papers were taken from the files, twenty years after they
were written, the August 1892 elections were under way. The Conservatives
went out and the Liberals came in. Drug control was not high on
their agenda; however, the new Home Secretary, Foreign Secretary,
and Secretary of State for India were all known to be anti-opium,
and the Prime Minister had spoken out against it in the past.
The prohibitionists knew they might get some sort of opium control
agreed if it didn't oppose the Liberals' central Free Trade policy.
Believing their moment had come, they began to quarrel among themselves.
Criminalise
it!
Before
the development of the hypodermic syringe by Alexander Wood, the
main concern about opium was not the threat of addiction, but
the danger of poisoning. Only after the 1860s did the risk of
dependency start to cause concern among the medical profession.
Certainly, people would have been habituated to the drug, but
the stereotype of the drug addict had yet to gain acceptance within
the UK.
Even
where individuals wrote of their habit, such as a chemists wife
who had been using morphine for 30 years, described her experience
in a matter of fact way, free from any sense of stigma her major
concern being the perceived tendency of the drug to cause her
to put on weight. Although the dependency syndrome had been described
two centuries earlier by Thomas Sydenham, the risk was not taken
seriously by most medical practitioners. Following increasing
reports of dependency symptoms after 1860, culminating in a series
of articles in The Practitioner in 1870, the debate
on the wisdom of permitting free access to opium accelerated.
In 1878 Edward Levinstein in Germany started the 'moral' argument
about the effect of opium on the character of the user, and was
one of the first to promote abstinence as a cure for the addict
[2].
From
the 1840s on, there were several anti-opium organisations, all
small and mostly broke. Their memberships overlapped, but the
leaders didn't get on well. None of them had ever tried to gain
mass support. The first organisation to come out against the trade
were the Birmingham Quakers. In 1869, Lord Shaftesbury urged the
Indian government to withdraw from its monopoly position in the
trade. By 1884 the Society for the Study and Cure of Inebriety,
founded by Sir Norman Kerr, aimed "to educate the professional
and the public mind to the dangers of intemperance". At that
time, alcohol was the main target for the temperance movement,
whereas other, more exotic drugs were not seen as much of a threat
to respectable Britons.
These
drugs were not expected to be a threat to the well-adjusted British
gentleman, and habituation among the Chinese and others was regarded
as the kind of 'filthy foreign habit' that should be stopped for
the foreigners' own good. Kerr recognised the dangers of opium
with a crusading zeal, and railed against its use, denying any
possibility that some persons could be able to restrict their
use to a moderate level. The Society for Suppression of the Opium
Trade (SSOT), founded in 1874, became the best-known anti-opium
organisation, but had always been elitist, controlled by Quaker
businessmen with knighthood's, funded by one family. Their best
argument combined economic and humanitarian interest; other exports
to China had been damaged by the sleaziness of the opium business.
Trade with China had been stagnant between 1860-80 while business
with Japan had tripled. The SSOT moved for ending the India-China
opium trade, and an enquiry into alternate ways of making up the
money. They took too long agreeing a proposal with other lobbyists,
but did manage to force the government to concede the 1893 Royal
Commission on Opium [8].
Meanwhile,
in February '93, William Caine, MP (Bradford East), had the papers
on ganja collected the previous year placed in the House of Commons
Library. 0u the 2nd March 1893 he put a public question to the
Undersecretary of State for India. "If he will instruct the
Government of India to create a commission of experts to enquire
into and report on the cultivation of and trade in all preparations
of hemp drugs in Bengal, the effects of theft consumption on society,
and on the moral condition of the people, and the desirability
of prohibiting its growth and sale." Would he also invite
written reports on the same matters from all other provinces,
and include in the commission non-official natives of India. The
Secretary of State would ask the Viceroy to do just that, "and
he will be glad if the result of this inquiry is to show that
further restriction can be placed upon the sale and consumption
of these drugs."(7) Since the Government seemed so amenable,
a secondary question by the Right Hon. Sir Charles E. Schwann,
Bart, was then dropped.
The members
of the commission were named on 3rd July, and held their first
meeting on 2nd August - a mouth before the Opium commission began
to meet. They continued until April, seeing over 800 witnesses,
assembling over 3000 pages into seven volumes, and a confidential
extra volume on hemp drug use in the Army; then the Finance and
Commerce department of the Government of India considered the
report, and another British election crept closer. It is unclear
what Caine and Schwann thought they were up to. Both were Liberals,
Temperance campaigners, and probably anti-opium. Schwann had a
safe scat, a comfortable merchants' fortune and radical opinions.
Caine wrote books, including 'Young India', 'Picturesque India'
and 'A Trip Around the World.' He had quit the Liberal Party six
years earlier over the Irish question, and been readmitted in
a new scat after losing as an Independent; he was to lose it again
in 1895. The timing, and the request for the commission to include
non-official Indians, suggest that they were part of a faction
among the anti-opiumists, perhaps trying to stir them into holder
demands or quicker action. Perhaps they were simply trying to
get in on what looked like a winning side. Neither is recorded
as ever mentioning hemp drugs in public again.
The
Dope Fiends of Old England
The international
drugs trade was quite a different thing from home consumption;
for example although the British Empire produced a great deal
of the worlds' opiates, over 80% of the opium used in the UK was
from Turkey and Persia [2]. The economic pressure for international
prohibition came from traders and nations with rival products.
In the UK drug control was at first pan of an increase in medical
involvement in social policy. Prescription by professionals had
to take over from self-medication before complete prohibition
became possible.
There
was not much openly recreational drug use in Victorian England,
other than alcohol. A few serf consciously unconventional young
artists and mystics searched for inner experience, rejecting vulgar
materialism, but the majority of drug abusers, then as now, considered
themselves to be taking medicines, to help them work or relax.
This was an age which demanded refinement, in every sense of the
term. They took extracts, tinctures, distillations or the 'active
ingredients' of traditional medicinal plants like Indian hemp
or poppies, in amounts that would kill modern addicts. This was
all for the good of their health, so morally impeccable. They
didn't do dope to get wasted, or didn't admit to it
Vulgar
materialism provided ever more purified forms of relief from the
stresses of righteous life, as opium was dissolved into laudanum,
concentrated into morphine, re-concentrated into heroin. Some
condemned booze while chewing opium, just as well-known modern
anti-drug campaigners have been tranquilliser addicts. In this
atmosphere Cannabis Indica was just another potentially useful
plant, which could be perhaps refined into some sort of medicine
but was quite unsuitable in natural form. The distinction between
drug use and abuse had hardly been invented. Doctors were expensive
and not well trusted, so the poor dosed themselves with whatever
remedies they could afford. Pseudo-medical opiate use was decreasing,
but still respectable; Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Florence
Nightingale had used it, and William Wilberforce, saint of the
antislavery movement, had eaten twelve grains a day for thirty
years. Self-medication bluffed into non-medical use. Boozing was
low class and unfeminine, so respectable ladies took "tonics."
Patent medicines were a huge business, often including alcohol,
opium, or cannabis.
Sales
of pure morphine, cocaine, and barbiturates were supposedly controlled
by the 1868 Poisons and Pharmacy Act, but quack nostrums and patent
medicines were not, and an attempt to extend the law in 1884 had
failed. The Act only affected shops, not users. One especially
dangerous popular remedy was Collis Brownes' Chlorodyne, containing
chloroform and morphine, which the British Medical Association
campaigned through the 90's to have banned.
"One
of the most valuable medicines we possess"
There
had been increasing medical interest in cannabis since William
O'Shaughnessy described the use of indian hemp as medicine and
intoxicant [9], relying on accounts of hashish use from ancient
Persian and Arabic sources, as well as on his own observations
in India. He described the use of hemp in the treatment of rheumatism,
hydrophobia, cholera, tetanus and infantile convulsions, as well
as describing the delirium induced by continued use. O'Shaughnessy
had written in 1839 that, with a couple of exceptions, "I
have been unable to trace any notice of the employment of this
drug in Europe." However, despite citing western works by
Ainslie and von Estebeck he managed to overlook one classic account.
The
noted medieval herbalist, Nicholas Culpepper (1616-1654), listed
a variety of medical uses of the common European hemp (Cannabis
sativa), including anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and antiparasitic
activity [10].
Culpepper
made no mention of the psychotropic activity, although the temperate
hemp he described would normally be of low drug content and be
grown for fibre. Culpepper's work would have owed much to the
folk herbalism used by British witches, or wise women, who until
the Christian persecutions had provided most primary health care
to the rural population, as well as to the monastic healers who
replaced them. By the Victorian "age of reason" most
traditional use had been suppressed, as the pioneer pharmacologists
began to analyse folk medicines to refine and extract the active
compounds therein. An unsuccessful attempt had been made in the
1840's to grow hemp for medicine in the London suburb of Mitcham.
Experimenters used it for athsma and other chest problems, sleeplessness
especially in cases of opiate or alcohol withdrawal, and with
opium and bromide of potassium in treating insanity.
One reason
why cannabis was not as widely used as opium products, or the
newer chemical remedies, was the difficulty found refining an
"active ingredient." There were problems getting supplies
of reliable strength, confusion about apparently different products
from the same plant, and uncertainty about its effects in the
body. However, it was used to treat many disorders. In 1889, DR
E.A.Birch described in the Lancet the successful use of cannabis
indica in the treatment of chloral hydrate and opium withdrawal,
drawing attention to the abolition of craving and the antiemetic
(vomit suppressing) effects and the stimulation of appetite in
patients who would not normally eat, or keep down, their food
[111. Queen Victoria's personal physician, J.R. Reynolds described
it in 1890 as "One of the most valuable medicines we possess."
In another Lancet article published in 1890, he described the
use of cannabis indica for treating insomnia in the senile, alcoholic
delirium, neuralgia, migraine, spastic paralysis, and convulsions
[12]..He allegedly prescribed tincture of cannabis to Queen Victoria
herself for the treatment of menstrual cramps. Cannabis tincture
and an extract made from resin were available from Peter Squire
of Oxford St in 1864, and wholesale through the Society of Apothecaries
by 1871. Chemists extracted stuff they called cannabene, cannabin
tannin, cannabinnene etc. but had no idea which, if any, was the
"active ingredient" until cannabinol was isolated in
1895.
At the
same time some thought of drug-taking as a form of poisoning,
and some researchers proposed that it either caused, or was, a
type of insanity. W.W. Ireland compared the mental state of cannabis
users to delirium, with its alteration of time and space and visual
illusions. British doctors' reports from Cairo Asylum in 1894
linked violent insanity with "Hashism"(13,14) Some of
the medical studies would have been recreational use in any other
context. Walter Dixon must have tried it on himself as well as
small furry animals when he showed in 1899 that the effects vary
according to type of preparation as well as method of ingestion.
He recommended smoking for immediate effect and wrote in the British
Medical Journal, "Hemp taken as an inhalation may be placed
in the same category as coffee, tea and kola. It is not dangerous
and its effects are never alarming, and I have come to regard
it in this form as a useful and refreshing stimulant and food
accessory, and one whose use does not lead to a habit which grows
upon its votary." He was to be a member of the Rolleston
Committee on Morphine and Heroin Addiction in the 1920's, who
opposed criminalising narcotics policy.
At the
end of the century cannabis tincture became popular again as a
cure for cramps, migraine, opium addiction, withdrawal and insomnia,
but the fashion faded. In the early 1900's a British Medical Association
campaign against 'Secret Remedies' got most of the opiates, cocaine
and cannabis out of tonics and nonprescription medicines. Doctors
became responsible for most drug distribution as the consumer
beverage trade withdrew. As drag dispensing was professionalised,
substances used for self-medication were replaced by more refined,
more medically controllable drags. The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission
report made no apparent difference to this at all, and it's quite
possible that nobody in the medical establishment read it. It
held quite a lot of scientific data but its purpose had been political
rather than medical. The political and economic interests of the
British Medical Association were quite different from those of
the Government of India.
The
Cosmopolitan Dope Fiends
It is
worth noting that most publications from the time refer to "Hashish,"
the Arabic term, Indian Hemp, or Cannabis, rather than Charas,
Ganja or Bhang, the Hindi names. The French empire in North Africa
had at least as much effect on European cannabis use as the British
empire in India. A certain style of drug use, the Wasted Artist
role, as established by the laudanum swigging Coleridge and De
Quincey early in the century, was revived by DR Jean Moreau in
Paris after 1845. The doctor, who experimented with hashish to
treat insanity, founded the Club des Hashishins with the writer
Theophile Gautier, for non-medical experiments.
Some
of the members were quite keen on a little delirium. Gautier was
a hack with brilliant friends, an 'art for arts sake' romantic
with a taste for macabre fantasy who encouraged the Symbolist
poets. Rimbaud and Verlaine shared his drugs. Baudelaire dedicated
"Fleur du Mal" to him, and wrote an essay that explained
their attitudes: "On Hashish and Wine as a means of expanding
individuality." They created strange, sensuous art, struck
foreign poses based on their beliefs about the romantic East,
scandalised bourgeois society [15].
By the
90's the club had imitators in London. If there was no recreational
drug use "subculture" in the 1890's, one network
came close. This was the circle of poets, psychics, writers and
would-be magicians around the Rhymers Club and the Hermetic Order
of the Golden Dawn. They didn't define their connection by shared
drug use, but they certainly included drug experiments in their
self-definition. Occult studies, drugs, hypnotism, proto-psychiatry
and new styles of arts were all 1890's fashions mingled in overlapping
cliques in central London. The Golden Dawn was established in
1888 by some occultist Freemasons, as a society of "Christian
practiced magic. In 1890 Yeats and two others formed the Rhymers
Club as a sort of literary wing, drawing inspiration from the
French Symbolists. None of the Rhymers Club apart from Yeats ever
achieved as much recognition as their French heroes, but they
had the style. They were melancholy, self-dramatising, they hoped
Byronic. They had doomed love lives and nervous breakdowns, and
mostly died young. Their defiance of conventional society included
such UN-English deviance as drinking black coffee and speaking
comprehensible French, as well as attempted magic, sexual permutations
not discussed in polite company, and hefty drug use.
Yeats
and his lover Maude Gonne tried using hashish to improve their
telepathic powers. Others had a more relaxed, recreational approach.
Arthur Symons was one Rhymer who survived to he described as "highly
strong, oversensitive" in the 1930's, best known for "Confessions
- A study in Pathology" which described his two years in
an Italian lunatic asylum and cure by near-fatal pneumonia in
1909. He was the author of 'The Opium Smoker; "I am engulfed,
and drown deliciously/soft music like a perfume, and sweet light/Golden
with audible odours exquisite/ swathe me in cerements for eternity.../".
In a biography of fellow Rhymer Ernest Dowson he described one
afternoon; a couple of ballet dancers and a poet visiting, the
host issuing tea, cakes, cigarettes and then hashish. "That
slow intoxication, that elaborate experiment in visionary sensations...
he sat awaiting the magic, half shy in the midst of that bright
company of young people." Dowson wrote poems with Latin titles
about doomed love affairs, and consorted with the "most
degraded" women in dockside dives. He experimented with mescal
in 1896, with the sexuality researcher Havelock Ellis. He died
of TB in 1900, aged 32. The other poet present at the hash and
tea party and the mescal experiment was John Addington Symonds,
a historian who studied the criminal mentality - he was part blinded
after several breakdowns and TB.
One of
their associates, Count Eric Stenbock, who wrote The Shadow of
Death and Studies of Death, was known for wearing a live snake
around his neck; he died aged 35, of either alcohol or opium.(13)
The
Wasted Artists were picturesque and dramatic, and their style
became a popular image of drug abusers. Ethereal and rather unhealthy,
possibly creative but definitely pasty-faced. The perception of
a difference between drugs suitable for legitimate use, under
medical control, and drugs which can only be abused, was extended
by their example; anything they took was obviously not doing any
good for their health. Still there was no anti-drug panic in the
UK. Drugs were still seen as foreign stuff, only used by those
who wanted to act like foreigners. The artists were added to an
existing mythology of the opium addict and the opium den, spread
by popular fiction from Wilkie Collins to Oscar Wilde, the addict
oversensitive, hollow-cheeked with torment, the dens glided in
rococo brothel style, populated by vicious Chinese and degenerate
aristocrats.
The
Respectable Fear begins
The first
demon dope stories came over from the USA in the mid 1890's. There
were, apparently, ever-increasing numbers of Black men with cocaine,
Chinese with opium, and Mexicans with both, plus marijuana. These
coloured men were allegedly using their fiendish substances to
gain the flesh of white women, and many of them would go crazy
with big knives if frustrated in any way. The British media only
retold a few of these tales at first. The pathological
imagination of the US Press kept it up for the next forty years,
changing the drug and the villains' colour now and again. Heroin
was refined in 1898 but for the first few years it was considered
a miracle painkiller and cure for morphine addiction. The subject
of the grossest stories was cocaine, also considered a miracle
cure a few years earlier. The medical enthusiasts didn't think
it suitable for recreational use. The recreational users disagreed.
The alcohol prohibitionists built a mass following and inflicted
a huge social disaster on the USA. When the alcohol ban was repealed,
drug control was not. The myths were retired for a few years,
but similar stories can be found, only slightly less racist, in
the mass media today.
Before,
during and after Prohibition, the USA lobbied for international
drugs laws, mixing economic self-interest with moralism. The Hague
Conference in 1912 agreed to the principle of certain drugs being
strictly for "legitimate medical purposes." It was never
effective internationally because of obstruction by the British
opiate and German cocaine businesses. The conference suggested
an investigation of hemp, but it wasn't followed up. The Assam
Opium & Ganja Committee of 1913(16) showed that the IHDC had
been forgotten or ignored in that province of India, for instance
accepting that ganja causes insanity without calling any evidence.
It did say that when ganja prices rose users turned to opium,
when opium prices rose they turned to alcohol or, alarmingly,
morphine. The number of licensed shops in Assam had fallen from
1116 in 1878 to 347 in 1911, and the committee thought it couldn't
be reduced further without provoking unrest.
Recreational
drug use in British literary circles in the '90s spread through
the next two decades into a wider worlds. Cocaine use had spread
well into the upper class by the First World War. Officialdom
grew concerned about officers on leave, who often weren't afraid
to wreck their health since their chances of survival were slim.
Morale would not be improved, it was felt, by the sight of the
upper ranks behaving like beasts, and it would be worse yet if
the common soldiers imitated them. There was a press scare about
the Germans using drugs and prostitutes, collecting blackmail
material. This unlikely tale and other stories of moral degeneracy
caught the imagination of the Army Council, who banned the sale
of all intoxicants to troops in mid 1916. In July the first U
K law against possession of drags was sneaked through, section
40B of the Defense of the Realm Act. It covered cocaine and opiates;
cannabis was not included, although it had been considered. Section
40B also banned "Malththusian appliances" (contraception)
and quack medicines. The same Act established legal closing times
for pubs, which caused a lot more fuss.
The
post war scandal boom
Immediately
after the Great War the British press got their first US-style
dope story. Actress Billie Carelton, age 21, died supposedly from
cocaine taken at an alcohol-free Victory Ball. Her supplier was
tried for manslaughter but could not be convicted. It was just
as likely the sleeping drug Veronal that killed her, but that
didn't bother the Daily Express. They included hashish eating
in the habits of a circle of degenerates who, they said, had mined
a sweet and innocent girl. In September 1920 a Dangerous Drugs
Act was passed, clarifying the wartime possession law and effectively
dividing the drug trade into medical vs criminal. It was greeted
with such apathy by Parliament that it was hard to make
up a quorum in some of the committees. Cannabis was still not
banned.
Internationally,
the UK government stopped blocking drug controls after several
scandals at home and reports that morphine and cocaine addiction
were spreading in the colonies. There were more sex drugs and
foreigner stories to keep up the postwar drug scare. In 1922 the
death of dancer Freda Kempton gained unwanted publicity for Brilliant
Chang, Chinese restaurant owner and alleged dope king since 1917,
handling morphine, opium and hashish as well as cocaine. After
many raids and mentions in the press he was sentenced to 14 months
- not much for such an alleged villain - then departed in 1924.
Eddie Manning, Jamaican jazz drummer and alleged dope king, was
convicted of dealing opium and cocaine in '23. Both, it was strongly
implied, had used their dealing to get close to English girls.
In 1922 three sisters were found half dressed and unconscious
in the company of a dead Chinese man, Yee Sing a.k.a. Johnny Hop,
in a sealed room full of opium smoke above a Cardiff laundry.
The girls never told quite what had happened, so the press made
it up, including a Chinese love potion made from hashish used
especially to subdue white women, with an antidote made from geraniums.(17)
Pulp fiction by the likes of Sax Rohmer helped spread the corrupt
aristocrat and Chinese dope plot themes.
Despite
all this advertisement, there was still no working class drug
subculture. The upmarket drug users of the 20's continued to be
found where the overlap between high society and the arts copied
what were seen as American fashions for jazz and cocaine. Aleister
Crowleys' 1922 novel, Diary of a Drug Fiend, thinly disguised
a real West End scene where cocaine was dealt in the Cafe Royal
on Regent Sweet. Crowley was a former Golden Dawn member who publicised
himself as "The Wickedest Man in the World," and ran
a black magic cult largely based on sex. He occasionally kicked
his morphine habit cold turkey in front of acolytes, to show the
power of his will; he did quite a lot to establish a link in the
public mind between heavy drug use and being a dangerous but pretentious
creep. Chloroform and morphine were popular with Lady Diana Cooper
and Katherine Asquith, models for several wild aristos in fiction.
Morphine might be risky and maybe immoral, but boozing was common,
which was much worse
Compared
to these types cannabis users were sweethearts. Having previously
tried smoking it to no effect, the painter Augustus John tried
a hashish compote or jam after sardines and wine with friends
in Hampstead; "...catching the eye of Iris, we were both
simultaneously seized with uncontrollable laughter, about nothing
at all..." Despite the publicity, and penalties increasing
in 1922, prosecutions under the Dangerous Drugs Act averaged a
steady 60 a year for cocaine, 65 for opium.
Cannabis
lust became illegal in the UK after the country agreed the 1925
Geneva International Convention on Narcotics Control. It was included
in the '25 Convention with the opiates and cocaine, because Egypt
and Turkey proposed it. An Egyptian delegate stirringly denounced
"Chronic Hashism" which he said caused most of the insanity
in his country. It also, he said, weakened users, gave them heart
and digestive troubles and made them look wild-eyed and stupid.
India opposed including cannabis in the Convention, as their delegate
said it had been used there since time immemorial, grew wild,
and they doubted that a prohibition could enforced. The British
delegate abstained from the vote but signed in the end. There
was hardly any parliamentary debate before it came into law as
amendments to the Dangerous Drugs Act on 281h September 1928.
Despite this cannabis offences, and 206 for opium. In 1950 for
the first time there were more prosecutions for cannabis than
for opium and manufactured drugs together - 86 against 41 opium
and 42 others. That year a series of police raids on jazz clubs
produced a new crop of stories about black men with drugs and
white women, this time involving marijuana and benzedrine. Cannabis
had finally got into the shock horror league.
Epilogue
The Indian
Hemp Drugs Commission finally had its moment in Parliament in
July 1967, after the Government had established an Advisory Committee
on Drug Dependence. J.J.S. Driberg, Chief of Police and Inspector
of Prisons for Assam, had given gave evidence to the IHDC. His
son Tom was a Labour MP. According to his autobiography [18],
the poet Alan Ginsberg asked Tom to "look up for him the
report... in the House library I found that my father had given
evidence before this commission, putting forward strongly the
view that people living in a damp, cold climate needed
the traditional consolation of ganja... The climate referred to
was that of Assam, rather than England; but I felt it was almost
an act of filial piety to sign a full page advertisement in the
Times calling for a liberalisation of the laws on pot..."
When it became obvious that there would be no liberalisation,
be attacked the government, his own party, in the parliamentary
debate. He said his father had told the IHDC that when insane
people were arrested a form had to be filled saying why they were
insane, and the safest thing to say was ganja as the police knew
that no further enquiry would be made. When the government spokeswoman
asked rhetorically "What sort of society will we create if
everyone wants to escape from reality 7" Driberg answered
that "They want to escape from this horrible society we have
created." The 1968 Wooton Committee on Cannabis was "in
agreement with the conclusions reached by the IHDC... that the
long-term consumption of cannabis in moderate doses has no harmful
effects." Given wide publicity, the government couldn't completely
to ignore this new study; instead they did exactly the opposite
of what it recommended, and increased penalties for all cannabis
offences in a new 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. Cannabis use continued
to increase dramatically. By 1990 there were 40,194 convictions
and cautions for cannabis in the UK, well over 90% of all recorded
drugs crimes.
1. Resolution
1369, Finance and Commerce Dept. (Separate Revenue), Government
of India, 21/3/1895. 23 pp. 2. T.M. Parssinen, Secret Passions,
Secret Remedies - Narcotic Drugs in British Society, 1820-1930.
Manchester University Press 1980
3. B.
Inglis (1975) The Forbidden Game London Hodder & Stoughton
4. Report
of the Royal Commission on Opium. Parliamentary papers 1895
5. Hansand,
Parliamentary Questions,
6. Resolution
3773, Finance and Commerce Dept., Government of India, 17/12/1873.
7. In
full IHDC report. India (Ganja) 97 in House of Commons papers
1893-4 LXVI.79.
8. In
(2) V. Berridge & J. Griffith Edwards, Opium and the People,
Yale 1982.
9 0'Shaughnessy
W.B. (1839) On the preparations of Indian Hemp, or Gunjah. Transactions
of the Medical and Physical Society of Bengal 1838-40 pp 421-461
10.
Culpepper's Complete Herbal. London, W. Foulsham & Co.
11.
Birch E.A. (1889) Indian hemp in the treatment of chronic choral
& opium poisoning. Lancet 30-3-89 p625
12.
Reynolds Sir J.R. (1890) Therapeutic Uses & Toxic Effects
of Cannabis Indica Lancet, 22-3-90
13.
V. Berridge, Origins of the English Drug "Scene" 1890-1930,
Medical History 32, 1988. Also
14.
Walsh J.T. Hemp Drugs and Insanity. Journal of Medical Science
40 1894
15.
The Hashish Club, Ed P. Haining, Peter 0wen 1975,
16.
Assam Opium & Crania Committee 1913.
17 Marek
Kohn, Dope Girls, Lawrence & Wishart, London 1992.
18.
Tom Driberg, Ruling Passions, Cape 1977
About
the Authors.
Sean
Blanchard is a freelance journalist and researcher. From 1981
to 1983 he was coordinator of the Legalise Cannabis Campaign.
Matthew
J. Atha B.Sc. MSc, was Legalise Cannabis Campaign Secretary
from 1983 to 1989. His MSc psychology thesis "Quantitative
Assessment of Illicit substance use" (Birmingham University
1987) included analyses of surveys of drug use at pop festivals.
He divides his time between advocacy work and performing as a
rock musician.
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