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Understanding Tamil Indenture Records (1834-1920)
What Are Tamil Indenture Records?
Tamil indenture records are historical documents from 1834-1920 that tracked Indian laborers who migrated to British, French, and Dutch colonies under contract (indenture) labor systems. After the abolition of slavery in 1833, colonial plantations needed workers β over 1.5 million Indians, including approximately 500,000 Tamils, migrated as indentured laborers to sugar estates, tea plantations, and infrastructure projects across the world.
These records include ship manifests, immigration passes, arrival registers, and employment contracts. They typically contain the migrant's name, father's name, age, caste, village of origin (often in Tamil Nadu), physical description, ship name, departure port, arrival date, and destination.
Major Destinations for Tamil Migrants
π²πΊ Mauritius (1834-1910)
241,000+ records via III (Indentured Immigration Index)
Largest Tamil diaspora destination. Ships departed from Madras and Pondicherry every 2-3 weeks during peak migration (1860-1890). Voyage duration: 6-8 weeks.
π«π― Fiji (1879-1916)
12,000+ records via Girmitiya Madras
Tamil migrants from Madras Presidency. "Girmitiya" (from English "agreement") refers to indentured laborers. Voyage: 8-10 weeks via Colombo.
π¬πΎ Guyana (1838-1917)
152,000+ records via GLDC (Guyana LCD)
British Guiana sugar estates. Ships like Truro (1860) departed from Madras. Voyage: 10-12 weeks via Cape of Good Hope.
πΉπΉ Trinidad & Tobago (1845-1917)
6,000+ records via TNA (Trinidad National Archives)
Cocoa and sugar plantations. Major ships: Fath Al Salem, Main. Smaller Tamil population compared to North Indian migrants.
πΏπ¦ South Africa - Natal (1860-1911)
Archives in progress
Sugar estates and coal mines. Tamil migrants primarily from Tanjore, Trichinopoly, and Madurai districts. Ships: Belvedere, Truro.
πΈπ· Suriname (1873-1916)
Archives in progress
Dutch Guiana plantations. Tamil migrants via British India. Ships departed Madras and Calcutta. Voyage: 8-10 weeks.
Origin Ports and Ship Routes
Tamil indentured laborers departed primarily from two ports:
π Madras (Chennai) β Primary Departure Port
The vast majority of Tamil migrants departed from Madras Harbor. Recruitment centers (depots) operated in Madras city where migrants underwent medical examination, received travel documents (immigration pass), and boarded ships. Common routes: Madras β Mauritius (6-8 weeks), Madras β Fiji (8-10 weeks via Colombo), Madras β Guyana/Trinidad (10-12 weeks via Cape of Good Hope).
π Pondicherry (Puducherry) β French Territory
French colonial port serving migrants to French colonies (Reunion, Guadeloupe, Martinique) and some British destinations. Smaller volume than Madras but significant for southern Tamil Nadu districts (Tanjore, Tiruchirapalli).
Notable Ships in Tamil Indenture Migration
Hundreds of ships transported Tamil migrants between 1834-1920. Major vessels include:
- Truro β Multiple voyages Madras to Guyana (1860s), Madras to South Africa
- Sheila β Madras to Mauritius, dozens of voyages (1850s-1870s)
- Hesperus β Madras to Mauritius and Caribbean
- Atlas β Madras to Fiji and Mauritius (1870s-1880s)
- British Empire β Madras to Natal, South Africa
- Ganges β Multiple routes from Madras
- Main β Madras to Trinidad (1870s-1890s)
- Syria β Madras to Mauritius and Reunion
- Fath Al Salem β Early ship to Trinidad (1840s-1850s)
Ship manifests list each passenger with detailed information, making them invaluable genealogical sources. Search by ship name above if you know your ancestor's vessel.
What Information Do Indenture Records Contain?
Typical fields in Tamil indenture records:
β Full name of migrant
Often transliterated from Tamil
β Father's name (patronymic)
Critical for Tamil identification
β Age at departure
Usually 18-35 years old
β Caste / community
E.g., Pariah, Vellala, Naidu
β Village of origin
District and taluk when recorded
β Physical description
Height, marks, complexion
β Ship name
Vessel that transported them
β Indenture/pass number
Unique identifier
β Departure & arrival dates
Exact dates when recorded
β Destination & estate
Colony and employer assignment
β Family relationships
If migrating with spouse/children
Note: The level of detail varies by colonial archive, time period, and record type. Earlier records (1840s-1860s) tend to have less information than later ones (1880s-1920).
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