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The Invention of the ‘Tropical Worker’: Medical Research and the Quest for Central African Labor on the South African Gold Mines, 1903–36

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Randall M. Packard
Affiliation:
Emory University

Extract

In 1903 the South African mining industry began recruiting African labor from Central Africa in order to shore up their labor supplies. From the outset, Central African recruitment was problematic, for Central African mine workers died at very high rates. The primary source of Central African mortality was pneumonia. In response to this high mortality the Union government threatened to close down Central African recruitment, a threat which they carried out in 1913. From 1911 to 1933, the mining industry fought to maintain, and then after 1913 to regain access to Central African labor. Of central importance in this struggle were efforts to develop a vaccine against pneumonia. While the mine medical community failed to produce an effective vaccine against pneumonia, the Chamber of Mines successfully employed the promise of a vaccine eventually to regain access to Central African Labor in 1934. The mines achieved this goal by controlling the terrain of discourse on the health of Central African workers, directing attention away from the unhealthy conditions of mine labor and toward the imagined cultural and biological peculiarities of these workers. In doing so the mines constructed a new social category, ‘tropical workers’ or ‘tropicals’. The paper explores the political, economic and intellectual environment within which this cultural construction was created and employed.

Type
Migrant Workers in Southern Africa
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

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2 Numerous communications from the Native Affairs Department to the Chamber of Mines stressed the need for the Chamber to improve working conditions, especially for tropical miners in the three years immediately prior to the closing of mine recruitment north of latitude 22 south. The following passage from a letter addressed to the Chairman of the Chamber of Mines from Henry Burton, Minister of Native Affairs, 12 June 1911 (Chamber of Mines Archives [CMA] N14, Native Mortality, 1911), emphasizes the seriousness of the situation: ‘I have discussed this subject of the heavy mortality of tropical Natives with my colleagues, who are in agreement with me that unless a decided improvement can be effected at an early date the Government will have no alternative to the measure of entirely prohibiting the introduction of tropical natives’.

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8 I would like to thank Drs Cory Kratz, Alan Jeeves, Shula Marks, Barbara Rosenkratz and Joseph Miller for commenting on earlier drafts of this paper. Research support for the paper was provided by grants from the Social Science Research Council and Tufts University.

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27 This pattern occurred more broadly of course in the history of medical discourse on ‘tropical diseases’, a term which became a part of European medical terminology at the end of the nineteenth century. The term tended to define a wide range of health problems among colonized populations of the world in terms of climate and ecology, while directing attention away from social and economic factors which in many cases contributed to health problems in these peoples.

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29 Vaughan quotes the following statement by the medical superintendent of the Robben Island Asylum in Cape Town in 1890: ‘The pure native races, like the Zulu and Kaffirs, are seldom affected with leprosy; but among the Korennes and cross-breeds between native women and nomadic Boers of the coast districts are to be found a large number of cases…’. She goes on to cite similar comparisons made by European doctors working in Northern Rhodesia in 1898, between the ‘promiscuous’ and ‘insanitary’ Bisa and the ‘sanitary’ Bemba. Finally she shows how western psychiatry ascribed psychiatric characteristics to specific ethnic categories; Vaughan, , Curing their Ills, 81.Google Scholar

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39 It is also significant that this shift in emphasis reflected, and perhaps contributed to, a broader transformation in the discourse on race and disease in South Africa at this time. As I have noted elsewhere, explanations for African susceptibility to tuberculosis shifted from behavioral (or cultural) explanations to biological ones during the teens and twenties. Packard, R., ‘Tuberculosis and the development of industrial health policies on the Witwatersrand, 1902–1932’, J. Southern Afr. Studies, XIII (1987), 187209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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65 Lister's status as a Knight of the Realm certainly strengthened his ability to influence discussions of tropical mortality. One would like to know more about the role of Chamber officials and mine owners in Lister's acquisition of this honor. In this context, it should be noted that the Chamber employed Sir Lyle Cummins to serve as technical advisor to the Tuberculosis Research Committee in 1926. Cummins' opinions supporting the idea that African workers were physiologically susceptible to TB coincided with the economic interests of the mining industry. His presence insured that the Committee's report reflected those interests. See Packard, , White Plague, Black Labor, 206–7.Google Scholar

66 CMA, Low Grade Ore Commission 1930–1, Exhibits 112–86, Statement by Sir Spencer Lister, Director of the South African Institute for Medical Research, Dec. 1930.

67 The case for a centralized medical system along the lines of that established by Dr Orenstein within the Rand Mines was put forth by Dr E. N. Thornton, Acting Secretary for Public Health, in written testimony to the Low Grade Ore Commission in 1931. (CMA, 22/1931, Low Grade Ores/Tropical Natives [Central Health Administration], E. N. Thornton to The Chairman, Low Grade Ores Commission, 19 Jan. 1931.) Chamber officials pointed to higher disease rates on Rand mines as an indication of the failure of the system Orenstein had constructed. Thornton argued that the higher rates reflected better record keeping and case detection.

68 The willingness of the Chamber and the Institute for Medical Research to risk the lives of Central African workers to prove the effectiveness of a vaccine that was of questionable value needs to be examined more closely. It is easy to explain the mine owners' support for this action in terms of their overall economic interests and their desire to believe in the efficacy of Lister's vaccine. These factors may also explain the attitude of the Institute's medical researchers. Yet the willingness of medical researchers to experiment on Central African workers also encouraged the dehumanizing practices that were an every-day part of mine medical culture. The rapid examination of long lines of naked men, the use of finger prints and numbered metal discs instead of names to identify individual African workers and the recurrent association of physical and medical traits with particular ‘tribal’ groups all worked to efface a worker's individual identity and humanity and encouraged the use of Africans as research subjects.

69 See Packard, , White Plague, Black Labor, 230–1Google Scholar, for a more detailed description of this episode.

70 These costs would re-emerge, however, in the 1970s and 1980s, following the withdrawal of tropical labor and the move toward labor stabilization. These costs were revealed in the sharp rise in TB rates on the mines. See Packard, , White Plague, Black Labor, 309–17.Google Scholar