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<title>BRITAIN AND THE GRAINS TRADE IN THE GAMBIA, 1830-1965</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1729</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 22:34:11 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T22:34:11Z</dc:date>
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<title>BRITAIN AND THE GRAINS TRADE IN THE GAMBIA, 1830-1965</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1730</link>
<description>BRITAIN AND THE GRAINS TRADE IN THE GAMBIA, 1830-1965
FANNEH, Malang
The involvement of Britain in the Gambia’s grains trade led to significant transformations in the &#13;
economy of colonial Gambia. Existing studies on the grains industry in the Gambia have focused&#13;
on production, with little attention paid to trade. This study was, therefore, designed to &#13;
interrogate Britain’s involvement in the grains trade in the Gambia from 1830, when the first &#13;
consignment of grains was exported from the country, to 1965, when independence was attained, &#13;
with a view to examining the socio-economic transformations the trade had on the Gambia.&#13;
The historical approach was adopted, while the interpretive design was utilised. Primary and &#13;
secondary sources were used. Primary sources included Colonial Secretary’s Office files, &#13;
Travelling Commissioners’ Reports, Agricultural, Financial and Intelligence Reports and &#13;
newspapers, obtained from the National Records Service in Banjul, The Gambia. In addition, &#13;
oral tapes obtained from the National Council for Arts and Culture were utilised. In-depth &#13;
interviews were conducted across the country with 40 purposively selected key informants - 19 &#13;
farmers, 18 traders and three griots - aged between 60 and 95 years, based on their knowledge of &#13;
the Gambian grains industry. Secondary sources included books, journal articles, theses and &#13;
internet materials. Data were subjected to historical analysis.&#13;
Beginning from 1830, Britain got involved in the grains trade through the activities of the British &#13;
merchants and companies such as Bathurst Trading Company, Elder Dempster and United Africa &#13;
Company. British intervention in the Soninke-Marabout Wars (1850-1870s) was to maintain the &#13;
peace and ensure the free flow of the Gambian grains to the metropolitan market. Competitive &#13;
capitalism of the 1870s, resulting from the French intrusion into the Gambia’s grains trade, &#13;
compelled Britain to impose colonial rule on the country in 1894. From the 1900s, the British, in &#13;
order to expand the grains trade, established the infrastructure of exploitation such as roads, &#13;
bridges and wharves in strategic Gambian communities (Basse, Kaur, Kuntaur and Walikunda), &#13;
which became commercial centres. The British involvement in the Gambian grains trade led to &#13;
socio-economic transformations of the country. There was significant increase in family sizes &#13;
occasioned by the practice of polygamy aimed at providing additional labour for expanded grains &#13;
production. There was also the emergence of female entrepreneurs (banabanas) and indigenous &#13;
merchants as intermediaries between the rural producers and European companies. Between &#13;
1914 and 1945, series of colonial policies like import control on grains, standardisation of &#13;
measures, Seed nut Rule and Head Tax on migrant farmers were initiated, leading to economic &#13;
transformations. From 1946 to 1965, there was emphasis on the production and export of&#13;
groundnuts, making the Gambia, a mono-economy.&#13;
The expansion of the grains trade occasioned by the British involvement from 1830 to 1965 led &#13;
to the transformation of the Gambia from subsistence to market economy. It also led to the &#13;
penetration of foreign capital into the country essential to the development of merchant &#13;
capitalism in the Gambia.
</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Sep 2021 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2021-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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