Page 15 - Salcombe Gin Voyager Series 'Island Queen' - Trade Information
P. 15

pineapple trade



                        The   first  large  scale   cargo   of
                        pineapples arrived into the UK from
                        the  Bahamas  in  the  1820s,  but  the
                        trade  only  started  in  earnest  in  the
                        1840s with the introduction of the
                        Salcombe  Fruiters.  These vessels
                        could make the return journey in three
                        to five weeks, knocking at least two
                        weeks off the passage times of the
                        1820s.  These faster voyages meant
                        the precious cargo could be delivered
                        in fine condition to the fruiter ports of
                        London,  Liverpool,  Bristol,  Hull  and
                        Southampton.

                        The fruiters were reputed to advertise
                        their cargo whilst sailing up the
                        Thames to discharge their cargo at
                        St. Katharine Docks and Nicholson’s
                        Wharf by displaying one of their biggest
                        pineapples on the end of their jib boom.

                        The cargo was sold by pineapple
                        brokers including the firms Keeling
                        & Hunt, Collings & Company and
                        John & James Adam & Co. The finest
                        specimens were sold at Covent Garden
                        and purchased wholesale by hotels,
                        restaurants  and  shops  like  Owen
                        and Bentley, a luxury fruiterer at the
                        north end of Bond Street, where each
                        pineapple sold for up to ten shillings,
                        the equivalent of about £300 today.




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