Stabroek News Sunday

The Demerara Ice House - The Original DIH

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One of the consequenc­es of the increased attention to British Guiana as a place to “try one’s luck” was a shortage of hotel and recreation­al facilities in Georgetown. The Demerara Ice House was opened in 1846 in response to this demand. This building at the corner of Brickdam and Water Street is said to have been designed by Maltese architect Caesar Castellani, who is also credited with the designs of many iconic local structures, including the “towers of the Brick Dam Police Station,” the Palms, and Castellani House, Guyana’s National Gallery of Art.

The Demerara Ice House was so named because of its trade in imported ice. In 1896, the building was sold to “José Jnr., Manoel, Francisco, and John,” the four sons of José Gomes D’Aguiar, for $50,000. At that time, the building contained a hotel, liquor bars, and a soft drink plant.

José Gomes D’Aguiar Snr. migrated to British Guiana in 1842 from Madeira to “try his luck.” According to Sister Mary Noel Menezes, the preeminent scholar on the Portuguese experience in British Guiana, he started a “small provision business at Plantation M’ontrose and subsequent­ly he traded at Plaisance.” By 1885, his business had included a “chain of liquor stores, a cocoa and chocolate factory, and a schooner shipping agency.” When he died in 1893, he was considered one of the wealthiest men in British Guiana. He left a fortune of about $400,000 (approximat­ely G$37 billion in 2020).

The building at the corner of Brickdam and Water

Menezes, M. Scenes from the History of the Portuguese in Guyana.

Street was situated on Crown Land, i.e., it was owned by the Government of British Guiana. It was not until 1929 that the company was able to buy the land from the government. That same year, Dr. J. G. D’Aguiar, Jnr., became the sole owner following the deaths of his three brothers. The partnershi­p was replaced by D’Aguiar Brothers Limited. In 1934, his son Peter Stanislaus became the managing director. Under his leadership, D’Aguiar Brothers Ltd. became the most influentia­l sweet drink company in the nation’s history. We will return to him and his role in the company’s growth and influence on Guyana’s economic, social, and political life later.

In 1914, the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Trade

Directory for South America listed 10 sweet drink manufactur­ers in British Guiana. They were all located in Georgetown. On the list were the Demerara Ice House; Booker Brothers McConnel and Co.; Chapman’s Ltd.; Cold Storage and Ice Depot; Jasmin & Gomes; Macquarrie & Co.; Niagara Soda Water Factory; Royal Crown Soda Factory; Smith Bros. & Co. Ltd.; and Virtue & Co. Most of these bottlers were located on Water Street, the main business artery in Georgetown in the

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 ??  ?? Charles W. Blackburne. “Demerara Ice House” (circa 1897-1912). Photograph accessed online at Internatio­nal Center of Photograph­y. Available at: https://www.icp.org/browse/archive/objects/demerara-ice-house-georgetown-demerara
Charles W. Blackburne. “Demerara Ice House” (circa 1897-1912). Photograph accessed online at Internatio­nal Center of Photograph­y. Available at: https://www.icp.org/browse/archive/objects/demerara-ice-house-georgetown-demerara
 ??  ?? From Waterton, C. Overtown Miscellany: Guyana Gallery, Old Advertisem­ents, p. 12. Accessed online at: https://overtown.zrg.uk/guyana/guyana-galleryadv­erts.html
From Waterton, C. Overtown Miscellany: Guyana Gallery, Old Advertisem­ents, p. 12. Accessed online at: https://overtown.zrg.uk/guyana/guyana-galleryadv­erts.html
 ??  ?? From Waterton, C. Overtown Miscellany: Guyana Gallery, Old Advertisem­ents, p. 12. Accessed online at: https://overtown.org.uk/guyana/guyanagall­ery-adverts.html
From Waterton, C. Overtown Miscellany: Guyana Gallery, Old Advertisem­ents, p. 12. Accessed online at: https://overtown.org.uk/guyana/guyanagall­ery-adverts.html

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