The Chinese Comission To Cuba

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Transcultural Studies, No 2 (2014)

The Chinese Commission to Cuba (1874): Reexamining International Relations in the


Nineteenth Century from a Transcultural Perspective
Rudolph Ng, St Catharine’s College, Cambridge

Fig. 1: Cover page of Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, June 1864, Vol. 29. (Cornell University Library)

As the abolitionist movement gained momentum in the second half of the nineteenth century, agricultural producers in
Cuba and South America urgently began looking for substitutes for their African slaves. The result was a massive growth
in the “coolie trade”––the trafficking of laborers known as coolies––from China to plantations overseas.[1] On paper, the
indentured workers were abroad legally and voluntarily and were given regular salaries, certain benefits, as well as
various legal rights not granted to slaves. In practice, however, coolies were often kidnapped before departure and
abused upon arrival. Their relatively low wages and theoretically legal status attracted employers in agricultural
production around the world. Virtually all the European colonies employed coolies; from the Spanish sugar plantations in
Cuba to the German coconut fields in Samoa, coolies were a critical source of labor. For the trade in coolies between
China and Latin America, a handful of Spanish conglomerates, such as La Zulueta y Compañía and La Alianza, held the

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monopoly. Assisted by Spanish diplomatic outposts, these conglomerates established coolie stations along the south
Chinese coast to facilitate the transportation of laborers. Their branches across the globe handled the logistics,
marketing, and finances of the trade. The substantial profits accrued from the high demand for labor encouraged the
gradual expansion of the trade after 1847, with the highest number of coolies being shipped to Cuba and Peru in the
1860s and 1870s. By 1874, over 260,000 indentured Chinese workers had embarked for the ports of Havana (140,000+)[2]
and Lima (120,000+)[3], and in due course these workers had an enormous impact on global agricultural production.[4]

The lucrative coolie trade between China and Latin America came to an abrupt end in the 1870s after allegations of abuse
in the international press were subsequently confirmed by Western diplomats.[5] A series of diplomatic struggles ensued
between the Qing Dynasty and the Spanish Crown over the treatment of the coolies. Five nations–– England, Russia,
France, Germany, and the United States––mediated between the two, but ultimately, they supported the Chinese case.
These diplomatic disagreements resulted in the dispatch of a Qing delegation to Cuba to investigate the allegations of
mistreatment. Its final report described the appalling working conditions of the Chinese coolies in the Spanish
possessions. After the report was made public, resistance to the trade grew in Southern China, and the Spanish
government was forced to end the trade in laborers between China and Latin America before both governments had
even signed a final written agreement banning it.

The Qing delegation to Cuba, which ultimately brought down the global coolie network between China and the Spanish-
speaking world, was covered extensively by the Chinese and international press throughout much of the 1870s.[6]
Information about the creation of the Commission, its journey, and the final report appeared in newspapers across the
globe. As was already evident in contemporary assessments, the delegation’s journey was of historic significance, and
many predicted it would have a huge impact on the Sino–Spanish coolie trade and on international agricultural
production. Moreover, unlike repeated Chinese defeats at the hands of foreign powers, the Commission represented one
of the few instances in the nineteenth century when the Qing Dynasty scored a diplomatic victory against a European
nation. Yet, despite its great historical significance, rather surprisingly, the Chinese Commission to Cuba has not been
thoroughly examined by historians; as a consequence, the general public remains relatively unaware of the Commission
and its significance.[7] For the same historical period, historians of Sino–foreign relations have instead focused their
attention on the Treaty of Nanking (1842), the Treaty of Tientsin (1858), and the Convention of Peking (1860). It is
therefore worth asking why this extraordinary Chinese Commission to Cuba and the resulting Sino–Spanish treaty of 1877
have been largely ignored by scholarship as well as by the public. Seeking to address this lacuna in the scholarship, this
paper examines the origin of the Commission, its investigation, and the consequences of its findings. Furthermore, in
view of the primary sources that have been made public in Spanish and Chinese archives during the last decades, the
history of the Commission suggests that a basic reexamination of Sino–foreign relations in the nineteenth century is
called for. Of no less importance, the apparent exclusion of the Commission in the historiography of the period is
indicative of the processes of reconstruction of public memory in China today.[8]

From conventional to transcultural historiography

Although the Chinese Commission to Cuba is rarely the subject of specialized examination, it does belong to the larger
history of coolies,[9] which is an integral part of the historiography of the Qing dynasty and of Sino-foreign relations.
Despite some fundamental differences of opinion, many Chinese and Western historians have agreed on a number of
operational assumptions concerning nineteenth-century Qing Dynasty and Chinese–Western diplomatic relations. For
decades, historiographical approaches to the study of Sino–Western relations have seen the two “sides” as distinct
monolithic entities. The Western “impact” and the corresponding Chinese “reaction” described in the scholarly literature
is heavily based on this East–West dichotomy.[10] This causal reasoning corresponds well with arguments made in
modernization theory about China’s path to the modern world. Furthermore, coolie history is widely assumed to be
indicative of the last Chinese imperial dynasty’s weakness in confronting the Western powers. For instance, the Zongli
Yamen––the Office of the Qing Dynasty, which was created to handle foreign affairs––is often described as inexperienced
and as submitting to the wishes of the Western nations; as being a form of Chinese bureaucracy that merely received
imperial orders or acted upon the direct commands of its chief, Prince Gong. Rarely have historical studies focused on the
collaborations among and between the Chinese and foreign diplomats, and their collective influence on eventual Qing
policies vis-à-vis Western countries.

Beyond these preconceived notions of monoliths, duality, and causality in coolie history, both Western and Chinese
accounts have reconstructed the past of the coolie trade as part of the larger narrative of China’s victimization.
Particularly vivid in the 1960s and 1970s, virtually all PRC publications related to the Chinese coolies have depicted the
coolie trade, along with the Chinese Commission to Cuba, as further proof of Western imperialism’s impositions upon the
Chinese people. The Chinese coolies, their families, and the entire nation were seen as helpless victims in Western hands,
and the crimes of the coolie trade were laid at Western feet alone.[11] These absolute depictions of Western victimizers
and Chinese victims are part of a public and academic rhetoric, albeit more subdued, that is heard in the People’s
Republic of China to this day.[12]

However, some recently released sources indicate that the coolie trade was never a one-sided venture involving only the
Spaniards.[13] Indeed, both Chinese and Spanish agents were heavily involved in creating, expanding, and maintaining
the international network in human trade. This paper intends to demonstrate that the Commission to Cuba in 1874,
which eventually resulted in the end of this trade, was also an outcome of a close cooperation between Chinese,
Westerners in Chinese employ, and Western diplomats who were willing to work across national boundaries to achieve
goals that were beyond their particular state interests. From the planning of the Commission to the execution of its

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duties and securing the consequences for its report, the “West” was in fact heavily involved, in most cases even on the
Chinese side. The leadership of the Zongli Yamen invited participation from known and trusted foreign colleagues
working in the Chinese customs; Prince Gong, the chief of the Zongli Yamen, knew full well that the complicated
diplomatic encounters between China and Spain which resulted from the allegations of coolie abuse could be best
resolved with assistance from a team of Westerners such as Robert Hart, A. MacPherson,[14] and Alfred Huber, all of
whom worked in the Chinese customs. In this respect, the state and the institutions of state in the late Qing period merit
further examination since the national labels, categories, and boundaries that have until now framed their analysis
appear to be at odds with the historical record.

The Spanish coolie trade and the creation of the Chinese Commission

Although Chinese laborers had been going abroad to work since the eighteenth century,[15] the institutional structure
and global organization of the coolie trade first materialized in the 1840s. Taking advantage of the newly signed Treaty of
Nanking, British firms such as Tait & Co. and Syme, Muir & Co. dominated the human trade between China and the British
possessions abroad in the 1840s and early 1850s. Coolie stations were established along the Chinese coasts, but coolie
recruitment was largely delegated to local Chinese crimps. When the British Parliament passed legislation against the
coolie trade in 1855, the dominant position in the trade was taken over by Spanish firms––for instance, La Zulueta y
Compañía and La Alianza––whose agricultural operations in Latin America required manpower far beyond what the
African slave trade could provide, even if it had not been hampered by the British navy’s efforts to cut off the supply lines.
The sugar industry in Cuba and guano fertilizer excavation in Peru were labor-intensive businesses, and their
continuation and expansion was seriously threatened by a lack of workers. Thus, in the entire two hundred year-history
of the international coolie trade it was during the 1860s and 1870s that these Spanish companies imported the largest
number of laborers.

Growing in tandem with this huge importation of Chinese indentured laborers, were voices opposing the coolie trade.
From coolie recruitment and treatment onboard transport ships to working conditions in Latin America, local Chinese
officials, Western diplomats, and newspapers inside and outside of China made their objections known. Of particular
concern were Sino–Spanish recruitment practices, which were seen as the most barbarous offense, since the majority of
coolies were lured to Latin America under false pretenses. In the early 1850s, as many coolies later testified to the
Commission, many Chinese in Southern China were aware of the cooperation that existed between the Spanish agents
and their Chinese counterparts:

Spanish vessels come to China, and suborning the vicious [sic] of our countrymen, by their aid carry away full
cargoes of men, of whom 8 or 9 of every 10 are decoyed.[16]

The kidnapping and luring of Chinese males into the barracoons or onto coolie ships caused widespread turmoil in
various places in Southern China, particularly near the ports opened for foreign residence and foreign trade through the
1842 Treaty of Nanking. Local petitions asked for help from the public, and printed reports in newspapers described the
disappearance of Chinese men and the subsequent destruction of families.[17] Equally important to the local officials
who took up the matter was the fact that the economies in these regions suffered as a result of the coolie trade. In 1860,
for example, Lao Chongguang 㵜઻‫( ط‬1802–1867), Viceroy of Liangguang, staged a raid on a Spanish ship in Canton, from
which more than one hundred chained Chinese coolies were rescued.[18] By then, most British firms had already been
prompted to withdraw from the coolie trade, and British diplomats now pressured the Qing government to ban the trade
with Spain, citing unrest in Southern China.[19] Among the most vocal diplomats campaigning against Spanish coolie
trade was Rutherford Alcock (1809-1897), the British minister to China from 1865 to 1869. During his tenure in Peking, the
British government signed the Emigration Convention of Peking (1860), which provided safeguards for the well-being of
Chinese coolies contracted by British firms.[20]

The US envoys in Peking were equally adamant in their resistance to the coolie trade. Many based their arguments on
humanitarian grounds. One representative, Peter Parker (1804-1888), who had been an ordained Presbyterian minister
and medical doctor in China before beginning a diplomatic career, reiterated that the trade should be banned primarily
on humanitarian and religious grounds. During his tenure as the American minister to China between 1855 and 1857,
Parker was confronted with repeated reports about this human trafficking, much of it involving American ships. In 1856,
he publicly denounced the coolie trade, appealing to all Americans in China not to be part of it. Labeling it as “irregular
and immoral traffic,” Parker argued that this inhumane business would eventually damage the relationship between
China and the United States altogether. He found further support in the rhetoric of the growing American abolitionist
movement. For him, features of the coolie trade “strongly resembled those of the African slave trade in former years…
exceeding the horrors of the ‘middle passage.’”[21] Parker also raised concerns about the treatment of the coolies in
Cuba and Peru to his colleagues from the Zongli Yamen.

However, it would be naive to argue that these anti-coolie trade sentiments were solely grounded in humanitarian
concerns. Economic and pragmatic considerations also played an important role in driving the opposition against the
Sino–Spanish coolie trade. Some American diplomats, such as Humphrey Marshall, argued that it was in American
economic interests to stop the Chinese coolie trade immediately. Marshall, the first US Commissioner to China, explained
that American agricultural production, particularly in the South, would be threatened by Latin American competitors who
were continually employing “cheap Chinese labor.”[22] Himself a planter from Kentucky, Marshall wrote to the Secretary
of State in 1853 with an estimate that each Chinese coolie cost eighty dollars per annum to employ, “far below the cost of
slave labor, independent of the risk which the planter runs in his original investment.” In addition, Marshall argued that

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the Chinese were “patient of labor, tractable, obedient as slaves, … [and] will compel from the earth the maximum
production.”[23] In his conclusion, he claimed that the coolie trade, if allowed to continue, would challenge American
political and economic power; he thus recommended that the president promote policies that would ban the involvement
of American ships in the coolie trade.[24]

In addition to these humanitarian and economic motives, the US diplomatic corps in Peking was also concerned that the
coolie question would affect overall Sino-Western relations and, perhaps more importantly, damage the Westerner’s
image in China. Benjamin Parke Avery (1828-1875), Chief American Envoy to the Qing Empire between 1874 and 1875,
summarized it succinctly:

Apart from the motives of humanity, growing out of our desire to ameliorate the condition of the Chinese now
in Cuba and to effect a reform for the future, we feel that a failure to settle the pending dispute on a basis that
will remove all causes of complaint about the treatment of Chinese by Spain would react against foreigners
generally, in the estimation of the people of this empire, and by intensifying their hatred for us, lead to
increased difficulties in our relations with them.[25]

Despite these calls to action by American and British diplomats, initial reactions from Qing officialdom were tepid
throughout the 1860s.[26] This indifference, however, changed in the early 1870s, when Prince Gong was faced with two
key incidents and realized that he needed to address the issue directly. First, the Spanish consul in 1871 requested
permission to open a coolie recruitment center in Canton, which had already been approved by the local governor. In the
following year, the Spanish consul once again asked the Zongli Yamen to approve his plan to open more recruitment
centers across Southern China. Upon approval, a Spanish coolie agent, Francisco Abella of the Zulueta Company,
petitioned the local officials in Amoy for permission to open his own recruitment center. However, Abella’s specific
petition was refused by the local governor because of abuse allegations against the Zulueta Company that had surfaced
in the press. The Spanish minister then demanded that Abella be reimbursed the sum of $300,000 for his loss. The Zongli
Yamen refused, but the Spanish diplomats continued to exert pressure.[27] At around the same time, the already
abysmal conditions among Chinese coolies became so serious that the coolies themselves appealed to the American
consul in Lima for help; he in turn forwarded their petitions to the US State Department, where they were turned over to
Samuel Wells Williams. Williams then presented the actual petitions written in Chinese by the coolies to the Zongli Yamen.
These petitions described the oppressive circumstances under which the coolies were working and living every day, and
the coolies themselves asked the emperor to do whatever was possible to save them from their misery. As Williams
added,

The condition of these laborers is very lamentable. Far off in a distant land, they have met this suffering and
misery, and they are like birds in a cage out of which there is no escape… [I would suggest] that you may
devise deliverance and succor.[28]

Although it was not exactly a requirement of his position, and he was certainly under no obligation to do so, Williams
urged the staff of the Zongli Yamen to demonstrate that the emperor was not altogether overlooking the petitions of his
people in Peru. He further suggested that, before the Qing government could send its own envoy to Peru to protect its
citizens, the American ambassador in Lima might be able to help on behalf of the Chinese officials. But Williams also
pointed out that although the American diplomats could help, the Zongli Yamen had to first ask the US president for this
courtesy directly.[29] At first, the reaction was subdued. As Williams recalled,

These officials expressed their sympathy with their suffering countrymen, regretted that they should have
been inveigled into such a miserable, cruel, servitude, and hoped that the evils would soon be mitigated, but
they had no vivid sense of their own responsibilities in the matter, and made no inquires as to the most
desirable means of doing anything.

Soon afterwards, however, Williams received a much more positive response directly from Prince Gong, who signaled his
awareness of the matter and indicated that he would deliberate as to what solutions were at his disposal.[30] In fact,
Prince Gong had already decided to act. He first contacted most of the foreign envoys in Peking to corroborate the
allegations of coolie abuses in Latin America. The envoys for Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands,
Spain, and the United States all received a letter from Prince Gong asking their opinion on the Sino–Spanish coolie trade,
inquiring into the allegations, and seeking suitable suggestions for resolving the problem. But no one would confirm the
allegations on the record, and Francisco Otín, the Spanish Chargé d'Affaires to China, even vehemently denied them.[31]
Some diplomats said that evidence was the key to determining what course of action the Qing government should take.
Mr. Fergusvan, the Dutch Minister in China, expressed that

every country has the right to see that its subjects who emigrate to other lands are well treated there; and if
China has undoubted proof that the laborers who have gone abroad have been cruelly treated, no matter in
what country, she has the right to inform the high officials of that country that Chinese coolies can no longer
be allowed to go there.[32]

Several foreign diplomats as well as foreigners working for the Chinese Maritime Customs Service urged Prince Gong in
one way or another to send a delegation to Cuba to investigate the abuse allegations. After listening to these opinions,
Prince Gong finally asked Emperor Tongzhi in 1873 for approval to send an investigative team to Havana. In his memorial
to the emperor, Prince Gong specifically mentioned the advice given by Robert Hart, the Inspector-General of the Chinese

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Imperial Maritime Custom Service,[33] to create a team of suitable experts for this purpose. Significantly, it was also Hart,
who prepared a standard questionnaire with fifty-one items for the Commission to follow.[34] True to Hart’s academic
training in Belfast, which had included legal and humanist studies,[35] his instructions to the Commission presented a
specific, systematic set of questions that was intended to elicit facts as well as personal experiences. The answers to these
and other inquiries ultimately formed the basis on which the Qing government acted to put an end to the Spanish coolie
business.

Hart was anything but a narrow-minded customs bureaucrat. He appears to have had a personal interest in the success
of the Commission as well as in making sure that the public knew of its work. In addition to developing the questions to
elicit information from the coolies, Hart used the newspapers in China and abroad to promote the agenda of the
upcoming Commission. Familiar with the power of the press in the West, he contacted all major newspapers in Shanghai,
urging the editors to print news concerning the Commission to Cuba.[36] He must have been pleased to see that many
newspapers in China frequently published reports about the Commission and the coolie situation in Latin America. Even
before its start, the Commission received wide coverage in the Chinese and foreign press.[37] National newspapers, such
as the New York Times in the United States, the Shenbao in China, el Diario de la Marina in Cuba, and the Times in the United
Kingdom, all frequently reported on the Imperial Commission. Some of these Chinese and foreign newspapers would
later receive materials concerning the Commission’s findings from Robert Hart directly.[38] The purpose of the
Commission and details about its members[39] the complaints of the coolie “slaves,”[40] and finally the Commission’s
activities in Cuba,[41] all were subject of detailed reports in the newspapers. The English-language newspapers in
particular, many of which had connections to Hart, provided extensive coverage on the team members, particularly on
Chen Lanbin 檔弲୺(1816–1895), the chief commissioner.[42]

Fig. 2: Chen Lanbin 檔弲୺ (1816–1895), Chief Commissioner of the Cuba Commission. (Wikimedia Commons)

The members of the Chinese Commission to Cuba

In the minds of Prince Gong and Robert Hart, the Commission (see Table 1) had to be international in nature. Prince
Gong first selected Chen, who at that time was the Chief Officer of the Chinese Educational Mission in the United States,
where he managed the educational program for a select group of Chinese schoolboys in Hanover, New Jersey. The choice
of Chen to head the Commission seemed advantageous. First, he was one of the very few Chinese officials who had
diplomatic experience abroad. Moreover, Chen came from Guangdong Province, where most coolies originated, and
could communicate with them in their local languages and dialects.[43] On the advice of Hart, Prince Gong nominated A.
MacPherson, a British national, and Alfred Huber, a French national, as the other two commissioners. Both had been
working under Hart in the Chinese Maritime Customs Service for years. At the time of their nominations to the Cuba
Commission, MacPherson was the Commissioner of Customs at Hankou, and Huber held the same position in Tianjin.
Both were able to read and speak Chinese fluently[44] and were well known in the foreign community in China.[45]
Prince Gong’s selection of these three individuals was not arbitrary or without purpose. In his memorial to the emperor
in June 1873, he indicated that foreign nationals were included in the planned Commission with two specific goals in
mind. First, the Commission, especially through the presence of MacPherson and Huber, should be familiar with Cuba
and the Cuban people [ ӧ ᛗ ํ Ո ࣈ ኞ ዇ ԏ 䚅 ]; and second, in order to preempt Spanish complaints of partiality, an
international delegation would provide unbiased observers whose final assessments would win approval from other
nations [᪃զ橕෭㾴ԏ‫ݗ‬ᘒ๐‫ݱ‬㾴ԏஞ].[46]

On September 21, 1873, imperial approval for the delegation was granted, and Prince Gong announced the
establishment of the Cuba Commission with a core membership made up of Chen, MacPherson, and Huber. The
appointment of the rest of the delegation was left up to Chen, who received this news while stationed in Hartford,
Connecticut. Having worked in a diplomatic and educational capacity for some years, Chen already had staff in the United
States upon whom he could rely. His deputy in Washington was Yung Wing ਻ 樇 , the first Chinese graduate of an

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American University.[47] Yung Wing recruited two Americans to the Commission, Luther Northrop, who in New Haven
had played host to two boys from the China Educational Mission, and Henry Terry, both of whom had legal knowledge
and knew Spanish. Chen’s confidant in the United States, Zeng Laishun ้ 弲 ኞ , a Singaporean with Chinese heritage,
went to Havana to prepare for the Commission’s upcoming trip.[48] In February and March 1874, Chen, MacPherson, and
Huber traveled separately from Washington D.C., Hankou, and Tianjin to Havana, where they began a two-month
investigation into the allegations of abuse of Chinese coolies.

Table 1: Membership of the Chinese Commission to Cuba [49]


Name
Position in Delegation Nationality Position Outside
Delegation

Chen Lanbin Chief Commissioner Chinese Chief Officer of the


檔弲୺ Chinese Educational
Mission in the US

A. MacPherson Commissioner British Commissioner of


泷ᐰᛒ Customs at Hankou,
China

Alfred Huber Commissioner French Commissioner of


㸇ᐽ෈ Customs at Tianjin,
China

Luther H. Translator American Interpreter of Spanish,


Northrop[50] West Haven, Conn., US

Henry T. Terry[51] Member American Attorney, Hartford,


Connecticut, US

Ye Yuanjun Member Chinese Chinese language


巃რ倔 instructor, Hartford,
Connecticut, US

Chen Lun Member Chinese Student, Hartford,


檔抷 Connecticut, US

Zeng Laishun Member (arrived in Singaporean Chinese Translator, affiliated


้弲ኞ Cuba before the with Malaysian with the Chinese
Commission to make descent Educational Mission in
preparations) Hartford, US.

Journey and investigation of the delegation in Cuba

Fig. 3: The Commission’s Journey in Cuba. Map: Detail from Thomas Jeffreys, The Island of Cuba with part of the Bahama Banks & the Martyrs ,

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1775. (David Rumsey Map Collection) [52].

On March 17, 1874, the full Commission convened in Havana, where they first met with the Spanish Governor General in
Cuba. Immediately afterward, they paid visits to all Western diplomats in Cuba to consult with them concerning their
investigation. Consular representatives from Great Britain, France, Russia, the United States, Germany, Sweden, Norway,
Denmark, the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Italy, and Portugal were all informed of the Commission’s purposes in Cuba.
[53] While the conflict was strictly between China and Spain, this important move to involve all the Western powers most
likely came from discussions between Commission members Chen, Huber, and MacPherson, as well as others. Among
these meetings, of particular importance was the discussion between the Commission and José Maria de Eça de Queiroz,
the Portuguese consul in Cuba and a known opponent of the introduction of coolies. To Chen Lanbin, the Portuguese
consul gave a detailed depiction of maltreatments suffered by Chinese coolies in Cuba, expressing his special concerns
about the unethical practice of re-contracting, which was employed by the Spanish planters after the end of the original
term of eight years.[54]

After meeting with foreign diplomats in Havana, the Commission began interviewing Chinese coolies in same city over a
period of nineteen days. To form a deeper understanding of the coolies’ living situation, it spent five days in Matanzas,
three in Cardenas, three in Colon, three in Sagua, four in Cienfuegos, four in Guanajay, and one in Guanabacoa. The
Commission completed a trip through the most important sugar-producing cities of Cuba, where they were able to see,
talk with, and observe the Chinese coolies firsthand, in plantations, warehouses, refineries, and prisons.[55] Chen and the
others also discussed matters with the local Spanish sugar planters and with Juliánde Zulueta, the most important
oligarch in Cuba and owner of much of the Sino–Spanish coolie trade.[56]

While in Cuba, the Commission strictly complied with diplomatic protocol. During its investigations, local Spanish officials
determined all the hours of visiting the warehouses and prisons. Visits to the plantations would take place only after prior
arrangements with business owners had been made. Thus, except for the conversations they had with coolies on the
street, the results of the Commission’s investigation were no surprise to the Spaniards. Although the interviews were
conducted in Chinese and usually led by the Imperial Commissioner, the Western members were present and understood
the accounts through a translator.[57] In addition to the verbal accounts, the Commission members were able to see with
their own eyes the wounds inflicted on the coolies. Verified by personal inspections, current and past wounds of the
coolies were noted. The Commission documents included the narratives of individual coolies and the injuries allegedly
inflicted upon them by their masters: the loss of ears, loss of sight, loss of fingers, loss of teeth, and so forth, as a result of
beatings by their employers.[58] These documents—both the testimonies and the final report—were all the more telling,
as the coolies talking with the Commission were facing potential retaliations from the Cuban planters.[59]

On May 8, 1874, the Commission concluded its investigation and left Havana. Shortly after its departure, the Spanish
newspapers in Cuba summarized its journey on the island. The sugar planters appear to have had no illusions about the
eventual results of the report. It would, the editorials argued, place the Cuban planters and the entire Spanish coolie
trade in an unflattering light. One Cuban newspaper, El León Español,succinctly described local sentiments shortly after
the Commission had departed from Havana:

Neither is it probable that the visit of the commissioner Mr. Chan Lan Pin will stop producing its impacts nor
was it done for the fun of making the trip. And, frankly speaking, since his upcoming reports to his country
must be unfavorable to us, one should believe, without venturing much, that the arrival of the Asian colonists,
as has been verified until today, will either stop completely or be significantly restricted.[60]

The editorial was correct. The written and oral testimonies from the Chinese coolies collected by the Commission
constituted a scathing indictment of the Cuban sugar planters and the Spanish authorities on the island. Based on 1,176
individual testimonies made by the coolies, the Commission argued that the employment contracts were virtually
meaningless because neither the Spanish authorities nor the Cuban business owners complied with the terms allegedly
agreed upon.[61] Almost 90 percent of the Chinese coolies testified that they had been sent to Cuba without their
consent. Additionally, upon termination of the contract, the coolies were not freed or provided a means of returning to
China; instead, they were held with the assistance of the local Spanish authorities and continued to work in Cuba. Without
hope of ever returning to China or gaining their freedom in Cuba, many coolies committed suicide. As a result of these
circumstances, less than 2 percent of all Chinese coolies ever saw their homes in China again.[62] With their stacks of
documents, the Commission headed back to Washington D.C. to compile and translate its final report.

Chen returned to Peking in late 1874, armed with the final written reports regarding the allegations of coolie abuse.[63]
After much discussion within the Zongli Yamen, contacts were resumed between the Chinese foreign office and Western
diplomats in Peking in February 1875.[64] Prince Gong sent a package of materials to the Spanish envoy, the diplomats of
the Five Powers and––deliberately violating his original agreement with the Spaniards––to representatives of other
Western powers. In the package the Zongli Yamen staff included the damning report about the Spanish coolie trade
written by Chen, MacPherson, and Huber, along with a significant number of coolie testimonies.

Not only did the Zongli Yamen send the materials to the diplomats in Peking but the Chinese diplomatic staff also
forwarded the Commission report, which included a Chinese version besides English and French, to many officials
throughout the country. This act, coupled with the efforts of Robert Hart to alert the media about the report, spread the
news about coolie abuses to all the major Chinese cities, where newspapers reprinted the key findings of the report and
added editorial commentaries.[65] Shortly thereafter, the international press also reacted to the Commission’s report
with extensive coverage.[66]

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Fig. 4: Editorial condemning the coolie trade, Shenbao, March 17, 1875. (Library of the Institute of Chinese Studies, Heidelberg)

Consequences and aftermath

Francisco Otín, the Spanish envoy in Peking, visited the Zongli Yamen in March 1875 and registered three separate official
protests. First, he complained that an American jurist had been added to the team (since Terry had not been included in
the original list). Second, he criticized the absence of Chen, MacPherson, and Huber in Peking for cross-examination by
the Spanish legation and demanded their presence. And third, he insisted that the definitive final report should be
written in both English and Spanish instead of Chinese because the Spanish representatives did not read Chinese.[67] He
further added that the Zongli Yamen should not have sent the report to all the embassies in Peking.[68] A rumor also
began circulating that Spain was getting ready to take military action against China and would particularly target Taiwan.
[69] Li Hongzhang ๫濜ᒍ, the senior statesman in Peking, and Ding Zhenduo ӟഄ榎, the Viceroy of Minzhe, believed that
Spanish threats were just “empty words”;[70] nevertheless, both men began making military preparations in anticipation
of a Spanish landing in Taiwan or Southern China. The Zongli Yamen, for its part, refused to accede to Spanish demands,
since Prince Gong had been informed by Hart that on the coolie question China was enjoying the advantage in diplomatic
circles as well as, according to assessments of the media coverage, in the eyes of the public.[71]

After publication of the Commission report, a number of Western diplomats wrote to their home countries reporting on
the public reaction in China. Their writings suggested that the moral standing of all Westerners had suffered damage.
The US Minister to China, William Evarts, to give one example, wrote to the Secretary of State, a great deal of information

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in regard to the sufferings of the Chinese in Cuba has been given to this government and scattered around the empire,
and the good name of all Western peoples has been more than compromised in consequence.[72]

After reading the report and witnessing the Chinese reaction to the matter, the members of the Western diplomatic corps
in Peking seem to have distanced themselves from their Spanish colleagues. In communications to their home countries,
these diplomats expressed their conviction that the report was factually correct and voiced support for the Chinese
cause. The American diplomat Avery, for example, indicated that along with other Western diplomats, he would be willing
to act as a mediator between China and Spain and to facilitate efforts on behalf of the Chinese to obtain redress for the
abuses, protect the coolies, and stop the continuation of the Spanish coolie trade. He was certain that his colleagues in
other Chinese ports would join in efforts to prevent further illicit coolie trade.[73]

Negotiations between China and Spain did, in fact, take place in Peking between 1875 and 1877, and were conducted
under the auspices of the Big Five. Finally, on June 1, 1877, the Spanish ambassador in Peking signed a new treaty with
the Qing government. It officially put an end to the Spanish coolie trade, which for all practical purposes had stopped in
1874.[74] In the final ratified agreement “concerning the emigration of Chinese subjects to the island of Cuba,”[75] Spain
agreed that in the future it would not recruit coolies by force or trickery.[76] China was to send a permanent mission to
Cuba to monitor the condition of the coolies,[77] while Spain was forced to pay for the return of former coolies to China.
[78] Moreover, all Chinese coolies still in Cuba were to be released following ratification of the treaty.[79] In 1879, the first
permanent Chinese consulate in Havana was established, allowing Chinese officials to observe and regularly report back
to Peking on the well-being of those coolies who had yet to finish their contracts into the 1880s.

Concluding remarks: revisiting the dichotomy in Sino-foreign relations

This paper has discussed the Chinese Commission and its trip to Cuba in 1874, the reasons for its establishment in
response to the Spanish coolie trade, the identities of its members, its investigation in Cuba and subsequent report, and
the aftermath of its activities, including an eventual formal ban on Sino–Spanish human trafficking in 1877. At every step
in the process, the Commission was the product of a series of interactions between Chinese and non-Chinese: The coolie
trade between China and Latin America started with cooperation between Chinese crimps and Spanish agents; the
decision to dispatch an investigative commission to Cuba was the result of the exchange of information and opinion
involving Qing officials, Westerners in the employ of the Qing customs, and Western diplomats; although the Commission
was chaired by a Chinese with overseas experience, the majority of the Commission’s members were foreigners in Qing
employ, and their involvement in the investigation in Cuba was critical to its ultimate success; the extensive coverage by
the international press, which increased the impact of the Commission and its findings considerably, was the result of
Hart’s making use of his extensive contacts with the editors of Chinese and foreign language papers published in China
as well as with the international press. Thus, in the end the substance of the Commission to Cuba differed markedly from
a conventionally understood “Chinese” delegation. The history of Chen and his team demonstrates that none of the
traditional units, such as “China,” “the West,” “the Zongli Yamen,” “Great Britain,” or the “United States” can serve as
suitable explanatory tools with which to explain the motivations and actions of the individuals involved. As the work of
the Commission suggests, foreigners working as Qing officials were willing to act in the Chinese interest even outside
their contractual duties in the customs for the following reasons: independent of the attitude of the country of their
citizenship, they agreed with the basic thrust of the Commissions’ work; diplomats were willing to support a Chinese
cause against one of their “Western” members because they agreed with the public opinion in their home countries that
the Chinese indeed had a case; because the growing public Chinese clamor against the abuses threatened to endanger
the standing of foreigners in China altogether; and because doing the right thing might be useful in shielding their own
agriculture from the competition of cheap indentured labor. In this context the traditional units of analysis are largely
meaningless. I suggest that they conceal rather than reveal the transnational nature of the process in which this
Commission came about and worked, as well as the transcultural interaction in the articulation of the values that carried
it to success.

On an individual level, foreign diplomats were rarely unrelenting imperialists or virtuous saviors of the Chinese coolies.
Instead their actions appear to have been guided by a number of motives, including personal experiences, and were
driven only partly by national interests. The private advice given by Western diplomats to Prince Gong, the mediation
provided by the diplomats of the Big Five, and the consular assistance of the European representatives in Lima and Cuba
were all part and parcel of the humanist beliefs and pragmatic goals of these diplomats. The line between Chinese and
non-Chinese diplomats was often––if not always––contested. Robert Hart, A. MacPherson, Alfred Huber, and Samuel
Wells Williams were certainly “foreign” in the sense that they held British, French, or American passports, but they also
worked tirelessly for a “Chinese” cause. As the work of Prince Gong, Hart, Chen, MacPherson, Huber, and Williams
illustrates, national boundaries and state affiliations in the late imperial age remained entangled constructs with
changing features.

An even more problematic aspect of the traditional historiography is that it has reduced Sino–foreign interactions to a
dualistic simplification of historical events like the coolie trade, which necessarily entailed a Western “impact” and a
corresponding Asian “response.” Equally critical is the notion that the West and China assumed their roles as oppressors
and victims, respectively. Under this East–West dichotomy, research questions such as “Why was China unprepared for
Western contact?” and “How did the Western powers use diplomacy and war to gain power in China?” have surfaced;
this kind of framework does not allow for analysis other than one driven by the anachronistic racial or national agendas
that may have never been primary considerations for most actors.

Certainly, one can attribute the relative neglect of the Commission to Cuba in both academic circles and public debate to

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a number of factors. Primary materials concerning the Commission are scattered across different continents and are
written in different languages. Furthermore, Spain has long been regarded as having played a largely insignificant role in
the Asia–Pacific region and as being a lesser power in Europe. But the most important factor, I would argue, appears to
be the incompatibility between the history of the Commission and the master narrative of late imperial Chinese history.
To be sure, the perception of a major Chinese diplomatic victory against a European power in protecting Chinese citizens
abroad does not correspond well with the storyline of a victimized, weak, and helpless Qing Empire.

The study of the Commission to Cuba as an integral part of Sino–foreign relations in the nineteenth century provides a
critical angle to the prevailing master narrative and offers some crucial lessons: that we not let an essentially cross-
border phenomenon be falsely observed through the lens of the nation-state; that we ought to pay more attention to the
ways in which Western and non-Western actors interacted in the nineteenth century, particularly in the context of Sino–
foreign relations; and that racial and national labels may not always adequately explain the motivations governing the
actions of people. A different approach to examining Sino–foreign relations in late imperial China might better serve us in
truly understanding the period. At a time when human trafficking is still a booming business in many parts of the world, a
revision of traditional, preconceived notions might provide a fuller explanation of the driving forces and operational
mechanisms behind such illicit trade.

The approach pursued in this study has greatly benefitted from the debates on transcultural interaction in the Cluster
“Asia and Europe in a Global Context: Shifting Asymmetries in Cultural Flows” at Heidelberg University as well as from the
advice and support of Rudolf Wagner, Hans van de Ven, Gabriela Ramos, Andrea Hacker, Antje Fluechter, Frank Gruener
and Martin Dusinberre, as well as valuable comments by two anonymous readers. All remaining errors are mine.

[1] In addition to the coolies from China, a significant number of coolies also came from India and from various islands in
the Pacific. For the purposes of this paper, however, the term “coolie” refers to the Chinese laborers, as they represented
the overwhelming majority of human “products” that were being sent to Cuba and South America in the nineteenth
century.

[2] Juan Perez de la Riva, “Demografía de los culíes chinos en Cuba (1853-1874),” El barracón y otros ensayos (La Habana:
Editorial de Ciencias Sociales), 471.

[3] Arnold Meagher, The Coolie Trade: The Traffic in Chinese Laborers to Latin America, 1847-1874 (Bloomington: Xlibris), 222.

[4] This impact was not merely a substantial growth of the agricultural production (sugar, above all) in Latin America, but
also the transition of the production mode from a manual-based agriculture to the much more efficient, machine-based
production. See Mary Turner, “Chinese Contract Labour in Cuba, 1847–1874,” Caribbean Studies 14 (July 1974): 66–81;
Fernando Ortiz, Contrapunteo cubano del tabaco y el azúcar (1940) (Madrid: Cátedra, 2002); Sidney Mintz, Sweetness and
Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History (New York: Viking, 1985).

[5] Most of the Chinese coolies were sent to Cuba and Peru. The coolie trade to these two locations was stopped in 1874.
The Qing government signed a separate agreement with Peru for another investigation to take place in Peru. See “The
Treaty between China and Peru,” North China Herald, August 8, 1874.

[6] The Chinese press in this paper refers to the newspapers printed in China at the time, including both Chinese-
language and English-language periodicals. In the 1870s major papers published in China included the Chinese–language
Shenbao ኩ 䁭 (1872–1949), the Wanguo Gongbao 嶫 㾴 ‫ ل‬䁭 (1868–1907), and the English-language North China Herald
(1850–1951) in Shanghai, and the Xunhuan Ribao ஗ 厏 ෭ 䁭 (1874–1947), as well as the China Mail (1845–1974) in Hong
Kong. For further discussions on newspapers and public sphere in China during this period, read Rudolf Wagner, ed.,
Joining the Global Public: Word, Image, and City in Early Chinese Newspapers, 1870–1910 (Albany: SUNY Press, 2007). For a
specific study on the Shenbao, see Barbara Mittler, A Newspaper for China? Power, Identity, and Change in Shanghai's News
Media, 1872–1912 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2004).

[7] In addition to the negative responses gleaned from casual discussions with my Chinese acquaintances, my review of a
few Chinese textbooks found no mention of the Commission or of the 1877 treaty between Spain and China.

[8] Scholarly literature that touches upon the Chinese Commission to Cuba has largely utilized a similar corpus of primary
sources. From the Chinese perspective, the coolie history has been written on the basis of Chinese Emigration: Report of
the Commission Sent by China to Ascertain the Condition of Chinese Coolies in Cuba (Shanghai: Imperial Maritime Customs
Press, 1876, http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/44812135 [Accessed on 24. November 2014], and the coolie petitions,
dispositions, and letters reproduced in Chen Hansheng 檔ᘆᒡ ed., 嶆ૡ‫ڊ‬㾴‫ݥ‬ා䕍娒 [Collection of Historical Materials on
Overseas Chinese Laborers] (Beijing: Zhonghua, 1985). From the Western perspective, a great deal has been written
based on the US and British diplomatic correspondence, parts of which were published in Papers Relating to the Foreign
Relations of the United States (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1861-)(hereafter: Foreign Relations) and British
Parliamentary Papers (Shannon: Irish University Press, 1968) (BPP). Little use has been made of Spanish archival materials,
especially the correspondence between Madrid and its representatives in China. Autobiographical writings of the Spanish
coolie trade company representatives in China also deserve further exploration in the studies of the coolie trade. These
papers are located in El Archivo Histórico Nacional (AHN) and El Archivo General de la Administración (AGA).

[9] Critical examinations related to Chinese coolies have been written in English and Spanish. In English, see Lisa Yun, The
Coolie Speaks: Chinese Indentured Laborers and African Slaves in Cuba (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2008); Evelyn
Hu-DeHart, “Chinese Coolie Labor in Cuba in the Nineteenth Century: Free Labor or Neoslavery,” Contributions to Black

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Studies 12 (1994); Robert Irick, Ch’ing Policy toward the Coolie Trade, 1847–1878 (Taipei: Chinese Materials Center, 1982);
and, Arnold Meagher, “Introduction of Chinese Laborers to Latin America,” (PhD diss. UC Davis, 1975). For Chinese-
language Studies, see fn. 8. In Spanish, see Manuel Moreno Fraginals, El Ingenio: Complejo Económico Social Cubano del
Azúcar (Barcelona: Critica, 2001); Juan J. Pastrana, Los Chinos en las Luchas por la Liberación Cubana, 1847–1930 (Havana:
Instituto de Historia, 1963); Juan J. Pastrana, Los Chinos en la historia de Cuba, 1847–1930 (Havana: Editorial de Ciencias
Sociales, 1983).

[10] See Ssu-yü Teng and John K. Fairbank, China’s Response to the West: A Documentary Survey, 1839–1923 (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1954); John K. Fairbank, Trade and Diplomacy on the Chinese Coast (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1953).

[11] For example, see Ding Zemi ӟ㳷࿆, “Meiguo pohai Huagong shiji” ᗦ㾴ᬼਸ਼嶆ૡ‫ݥ‬斯 [Historical Chronicle of Chinese
Workers under American Oppression], Lishi jiaoxue 䵌‫ݥ‬ර䋊 3 (1951): 5–8; Zhang Zhilian 䔴ᜡ宗, “1904–1910 nian Nanfei
Ying shu Delansiwaer zhaoyong Huagong shijian de zhenxiang” 1904–1910 ଙ‫ܖ‬ᶋ᝕䍋஛弲ේ኎凟೗አ嶆ૡԪկጱ፥ፘ [The
Truth about the Employment of Chinese Workers in British Transvaal in South Africa, 1904-1910], Beijing daxue xuebao ۹
Ղय़䋊䋊䁭 3 (1956): 77–96; Shi Jun ‫ݥ‬敎, “Du yidian shijie shi” 捝Ӟ焧Ӯኴ‫[ ”ݥ‬Reading Some World History], People’s Daily,
April 9, 1972. Such portrayals continued even shortly after the Cultural Revolution, see Luo Rongqu 嬄䯍Ⴠ, “’Nuli’, ’kuli’
de xueleishi—” “ঁ櫅”̵“ᝒ‫”ێ‬ጱᤅ些‫—ݥ‬Ya Fei La bei yapo minzu de gongtong kunan 㫎ᶋ೉ᤩ䃲ᬼ࿆෧ጱ‫ᝒݶو‬櫞”
[“Slaves” and “Coolies”: Sufferings Shared by the Oppressed Asian, African, and Latino Peoples], People’s Daily, November
13, 1977.

[12] Li Nanyou ๫ ‫ ݋ ܖ‬, “Haiwai Huagong xueleishi” ၹ क़ 嶆 ૡ ᤅ 些 ‫[ ݥ‬History of Blood and Tears of Overseas Chinese
Workers], People’s Daily, November 27, 1983; also see the documentary, Huagong juntuan 嶆 ૡ 敎 㿁 [Army of Chinese
Laborers], 6 episodes, first broadcast in 2009 by CCTV. Directed and written by Guilin Zhang, Xiaobin Wang, Yongqing
Chen, and Zhihong Ren. http://jilu.cntv.cn/humhis/huagongjuntuan/videopage/index.shtml [Accessed on 03. December
2014].

[13] In the last decade, the reorganization of the Spanish national archives has made access to the primary sources of the
coolie trade from the Spanish perspective possible. Particularly relevant is the archival material from the Ministry of
Overseas Affairs (Ministerio de Ultramar), which sheds light on the four-decade-long diplomatic negotiations between
Madrid and Peking over the coolie trade.

[14] In all the Spanish, Chinese, and English sources, I have yet to come across the full first name of MacPherson.

[15] One of the first organized Chinese mass migrations followed a Dutch initiative in the seventeenth century. See Army
Vandenbosch, “A Problem in Java: The Chinese in Dutch East Indies,” Pacific Affairs, vol. 3, no. 11 (November 1930): 1001.

[16] Cuba Commission Report, 7.

[17] Wu Jianxiong 㸇㴨ᵜ, Shijiu shiji qianwang Guba de Hua gong ‫܈‬ԜӮ夵‫ڹ‬ஃ‫ݘ‬૬ጱ嶆ૡ 1847–1874 [Chinese Laborers
Heading to Cuba During the Nineteenth Century] (Taipei: Academia Sinica, 1988), 9.

[18] British Parliamentary Papers, vol. 4: 202–203.

[19] Yun, The Coolie Speaks, 21.

[20] After the signing of the convention, the costs of coolie procurement became so high that many British planters
decided to stop importing more Chinese coolies. See Meagher, The Coolie Trade, 249.

[21] “Public Notification of Peter Parker,” January 10, 1856. Parker Correspondence, 625–626.

[22] House Executive Document no. 123, 33rd Cong., 1st sess.

[23] Ibid., 78-82.

[24] Moon-Ho Jung, Coolies and Cane: Race, Labor, and Sugar in the Age of Emancipation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 2006), 19.

[25] Avery to Fish, No. 168, Foreign Relations, July 7, 1875.

[26] In fact, this was the observation made by both the American and Spanish envoys in Peking at that time. See Williams
to Fish, No. 134, Foreign Relations, November 6, 1873; AHN, Ultramar, 5198, Exp. 6.

[27] Irick, Ch’ing Policy toward the Coolie Trade, 249–250.

[28] Prince Gong to Williams, No. 37b, Foreign Relations, July 17, 1871.

[29] Williams to Fish, No. 37, Foreign Relations, July 26, 1871.

[30] Prince Gong to Williams, No. 37b, Foreign Relations, July 17, 1871.

[31] AHN, Ultramar, 5194, Exp. 39.

[32] Avery to Fish, No. 151, Foreign Relations, March 31, 1875.

[33] Chouban yiwu shimo 墯旰२㵗ত๛ [The Management of Barbarian Affairs in its Entirety], Vol. 91, 27–29.

[34] Avery to Fish, No. 151, Foreign Relations, March 31, 1875.

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[35] Quite different from today’s college major selections, Hart’s undergraduate degree at Queen’s University in Belfast
followed a liberal arts program in which he studied a wide variety of subjects such as languages, history, and philosophy.
Importantly, his program included a year-long legal training before he graduated in 1853. See Queen’s College Calendar of
1853, located at the Special Collections at the Queen’s University of Belfast, which indicates Hart’s graduation and
academic program.

[36] Hart to Campbell, No. 149, The I.G. in Peking: Letters of Robert Hart, 1868–1907 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1975), April 21, 1876.

[37] For reports prior to the return of Cuba Commission, see North China Herald, October 4, 1873 (vol. 28, issue 0335),
February 12, 1874 (vol. 29, issue 0354), May 2, 1874 (vol. 29, issue 0365).

[38] Hart to Campbell, No. 149, Letters of Robert Hart, April 21, 1876. In this letter, Hart gives instructions to his associate to
whom the materials should be delivered.

[39] “Arrival of Chinese Commissioners,“New York Times, February 20, 1874.

[40] “Cuba: The Chinese Commission––Slaveholder’s Alarms,” New York Times, February 21, 1874.

[41] “Zhongguo pai shichen fu Guba guo” Ӿ㾴ၝֵᛒ᩵‫ݘ‬૬㾴 [China Sends Special Envoy to Cuba], Shenbao, October 10,
1873.

[42] For coverage on Chen Lanbin see, for example, China Mail, December 18, 1873, and North China Herald, December 25,
1873. Various transliterations of Chen’s name appear in contemporary English and Spanish publications: “Chin Lan Pin,”
“Chin Len Pin,” and “Chan Lan-pin.”

[43] Williams to Fish, No. 134, Foreign Relations, November 6, 1873.

[44] Ibid.

[45] MacPherson apparently enjoyed a good relationship with the American legation in Peking. Samuel Wells Williams,
the American chargé d'affaires in Peking at that time, directly provided MacPherson with a copy of the decree of
O'Donnell in 1860, and the recent law of Valmaseda, ordering the reengagement of coolies in the United States. See
Williams to Fish, No. 134, Foreign Relations, November 6, 1873.

[46] Chouban yiwu shimo, Vol. 91, 29. “෭㾴” denotes Spain.

[47] Yung Wing (1828–1912), graduated from Yale University in 1854. While Chen and his international team were
travelling to Cuba, Yung was accompanied by two Americans who were heading to Peru for another investigation of the
working conditions for coolies there.

[48] Edward J.M. Rhoads, “In the Shadow of Yung Wing: Zeng Laishun and the Chinese Education Mission to the United
States,” Pacific Historical Review 43 (2005): 19–58.

[49] The exact roster of the Commission is not clear. While the listed members had participated in the Commission’s
activities in Cuba, there were probably more assistants (Chinese or otherwise) accompanying the Commission. One
Cuban newspaper reported that the Commission had ten assistants. See El Diario de la Marina, April 10, 1874.

[50] El Diario de la Marina, March 18, 1874; “Arrival of Chinese Commissioners,” New York Times, February 20, 1874.

[51] Ibid.

[52] Cuba Commission Report, 2–4.

[53] Cuba Commission Report, 2.

[54] The Portuguese diplomat remained outspoken on the coolie trade, despite repeated attempts by the planters to buy
his silence in front of the delegation. See Eduardo Marrero Cruz, Julián de Zulueta y Amondo: Promotor del Capitalismo en
Cuba (Havana: Ediciones Unión, 2006), 76. To explain the map better, please add This route of the Commission in Cuba is
an approximate drawing, according to the descriptions stated in the Cuba Commission Report. The Commission visited
numerous plantations in all key agricultural sites, where coolies were heavily populated.

[55] Cuba Commission Report, 3.

[56] “Cuba: The New Decrees––Immigration to the United States––The Chinese Commission,” New York Times, May 14,
1874.

[57] Cuba Commission Report, 4.

[58] Cuba Commission Report, 39.

[59] Yun, The Coolie Speaks, 45-48.

[60] El León Español, May 17, 1874. “[…] la visita del comisionado Sr. Chin Lan Pin, ni es probable que deje de producir sus
efectos ni que se haya hecho por ganas de pasear; y como, hablando con franqueza, sus informes al llegar a su país
deben sernos poco favorables, se puede creer, sin tener que aventurarse mucho, quela venida de colonos asiáticos como
se ha verificado hasta el día, o cesará del todo o se restringirá notablemente.” As cited in José Luis Luzón, “Chineros,
diplomáticos y hacendados en La Habana colonial: Don Francisco Abellá y Raldiris y su proyecto de inmigración libre a

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Cuba (1874),” Boletín americanista, Nº. 39-40 (1989), 148. My translation.

[61] Cuba Commission Report, 3.

[62] Evelyn Hu-Dehart, “Chinese Coolie Labor in Cuba in the Nineteenth Century,” Contributions in Black Studies 12 (1994):
3; Cuba Commission Report, 150–151.

[63] It is unclear if MacPherson and Huber returned to China before Chen did. Archival documents only indicate that Chen
went back to China with Ye, who was also a member of the Commission. See Irick, Ch’ing Policy toward the Coolie Trade,
301. In any case, the final Commission Report and their translated copies, which are dated to October 20, 1874, were
signed by all three commissioners.

[64] Avery to Fish, No. 151, Foreign Relations, March 31, 1875.

[65] “Jielu Zongli Yamen chaban zhao gong chu Yang shi laiwen” ℄桟婦ቘᤌ槹ັ旰೗ૡ‫ڊ‬၇Ԫ㬵෈ [Summary of the Zongli
Yamen’s Inspection on the Worker Recruitment for Overseas], Shenbao, March 10–16, 1875. Also “Shu shichen deng bing
fu chakan Guba Hua yong qingxing bingce gong jie hou” 䨗ֵᛒᒵᐫ䕸ັۨ‫ݘ‬૬嶆㯸ఘ୵ᐫٙ‫׀‬奾஍ [Conclusion of the
Inspection of the Chinese Laborers in Cuba], Shenbao, March 17, 1875.

[66] For instance, see “Suppression of the Coolie Trade,” New York Times, February 26, 1877 and “El fin de la colonization
asiatica,” El Diario de la Marina, January 28, 1877.

[67] AHN, Ultramar, 5194, Exp. 39.

[68] Chouban yiwu shimo, vol. 91, 27–29.

[69] Irick, Ch’ing Policy toward the Coolie Trade, 293–294. The Spanish legation had repeatedly used military threat as a
threat. See Hart to Campbell, No. 66, Letters of Robert Hart, October 9, 1873.

[70] Ibid.

[71] Hart to Campbell, No. 66, Letters of Robert Hart, October 9, 1873.

[72] Seward to Evarts, No. 78, Foreign Relations, January 10, 1878.

[73] Avery to Fish, No. 151, Foreign Relations, March 31, 1875.

[74] The details of the Sino-Spanish negotiations and diplomatic ruptures were reported by the Spanish envoy to the
Ministry of Overseas Affair in 1877. See AHN, Ultramar, 5221, Exp. 50.

[75] AHN, Ultramar, 279, Exp. 4. “Convenio relativo a la emigración de súbditos chinos a la isla de Cuba.”

[76] Ibid., Article 1.

[77] Ibid., Article 2.

[78] Ibid., Article 4.

[79] Ibid., Article 16.

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