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America's First Adventure in China: Trade, Treaties, Opium, and Salvation PDF

295 Pages·2013·2.72 MB·English
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AmericA’s First Adventure in chinA AmericA’s First Adventure in chinA w Trade, Treaties, Opium, and Salvation John r. hAddAd Temple UniversiTy press philadelphia Temple UniversiTy press philadelphia, pennsylvania 19122 www.temple.edu/tempress Copyright © 2013 by Temple University all rights reserved published 2013 library of Congress Cataloging-in-publication data haddad, John rogers. america’s first adventure in China : trade, treaties, opium, and salvation / John r. haddad. pages cm includes bibliographical references and index. isBn 978-1-4399-0689-7 (cloth : alk. paper) — isBn 978-1-4399-0691-0 (e-book) 1. United states—relations— China. 2. China—relations—United states. 3. United states—Commerce—China—history—18th century. 4. China— Commerce—United states—history—18th century. 5. United states—Commerce—China—history—19th century. 6. China— Commerce—United states—history—19th century. 7. Opium trade—China—history—19th century. 8. missions, american— China—history—19th century. 9. China—history—Opium War, 1840-1842. 10. China—history—Taiping rebellion, 1850- 1864. i. Title. e183.8.C5h174 2013 327.73051—dc23 2012040901 The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the american national standard for information sciences—permanence of paper for printed library materials, ansi Z39.48-1992 printed in the United states of america 2 4 6 8 9 7 5 3 1 e contents acknowledgments vii a note on the spelling of Chinese Words ix introduction 1 1 First Contact: The voyage of the Empress of China 7 2 system men: The rise of perkins and Company 31 3 all for a Cup of Tea: Finding Goods for the Canton market 56 4 Beachhead of God: The First Wave of missionaries 81 5 rising on smoke: Opium and identity in Canton 110 6 Formal Ties: The Caleb Cushing mission 136 7 Centrifugal Force: The spread of people, Goods, Capital, and ideas 160 8 heavenly War: americans and the Taiping rebellion 183 9 Cooperation: Burlingame and the reinvention of sino-Western relations 208 Conclusion 231 notes 235 Bibliography 263 index 275 e Acknowledgments this book would not have been possible without the generosity, sup- port, and insights of several people and institutions. i thank the leadership at penn state harrisburg for granting me the sabbatical that made the early stages of this project possible. i am also grateful to the Fulbright program for placing me in a research-teaching position at hong Kong University. There i joined the american studies program, whose director, Kendall Johnson, was a wonderful host, a helpful colleague, and a terrific friend. i would also like to thank Glenn shive of the hong Kong–america Center who coordinated much of my Fulbright experience, enriching it immeasurably. i owe a debt of gratitude to those who read my work at various stages: paul van dyke of sun yat-sen University in Guangzhou, peter Buck of harvard University (retired), and steven Conn of Ohio state University. along with saving me from mistakes, these readers generously provided me with access to their knowledge and expertise. my editor, Janet Francendese, who guided me every step of the way and was a true joy to work with, deserves my maximal gratitude. i also acknowledge the friends, colleagues, and mentors who offered continuous encouragement. at penn state harrisburg, i benefited from the unwavering support of simon Bronner, Charlie Kupfer, anne verplanck, erin Battat, anthony Buccitelli, michael Barton, Catherine rios, david Witwer, Greg Crawford, and Oranee Tawatnuntachai. Two others merit special mention. a longtime friend, daniel medwed, was with me in Japan when i first developed an interest in americans in asia; later, in graduate school, the late William h. Goetzmann taught me how to convert this inter- est into narrative history. Finally, i thank family members. my parents, richard and Betsey, pro- vided vital support and good cheer every step of the way, as did my brother, viii  •  aCKnOWledGmenTs rich, his wife, sandy, and their three boys, Tim, alex, and sam. similarly, i am grateful to my wife’s family in China—in particular, my parents-in-law, Wang Qingyi and yang Xiurong—who epitomize the Chinese tradition of respecting scholarship. To my wife, Catherine, and my children, William and elizabeth, i have this to say: you helped me in profound ways you may never understand. Though perhaps it did not always seem like it, this effort was for you all along. e A note on the spelling of chinese Words the romanization of Chinese poses problems for historians because, for any given word or proper name, several different spellings can exist. in the 1950s the Chinese adopted pinyin as the state’s official system on the grounds that its spellings most closely approximate the true sound of mandarin Chinese. For this reason, this book uses pinyin system as its default system. That said, there are two exceptions to this rule. First, some Chinese personal and place names, when converted into pinyin, ap- pear unrecognizable to many of today’s readers, they being more familiar with an older spelling. in these cases, the author has opted to leave certain names in their older and more familiar form. second, when certain names appear repeatedly one specific way in primary source materials, the author has elected to retain these spellings. For example, since nineteenth-century american sources, without exception, referred to the city of Guangzhou (a pinyin spelling) as Canton, the latter spelling is used here. likewise, Beijing appears in this text as peking.

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In 1784, when Americans first voyaged to China, they confronted Chinese authorities who were unaware that the United States even existed. Nevertheless, a long, complicated, and fruitful trade relationship was born after American traders, missionaries, diplomats, and others sailed to China with lofty
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