Eastern Eye (UK)

India links of UK stately homes

NATIONAL TRUST KEEN TO ‘INTEGRATE COLONIAL HISTORY OF EACH PROPERTY INTO ITS ACCOUNT’

- By AMIT ROY

CORINNE FOWLER, who is professor of post-colonial literature at Leicester University, has written a hard-hitting book about racism in the countrysid­e called Green Unpleasant Land: Creative Responses to Rural England’s Colonial Connection­s, which will be published by Peepal Tree Press on November 6.

“The countrysid­e is the final frontier of belonging for black and Asian Britons,” Fowler said. “This is an opportunit­y for people to see that the countrysid­e has more to do with the rest of the world than we all thought.”

The book’s title is a twist on the much loved lines from Blake’s Jerusalem: “I will not cease from mental fight/ Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand/ Till we have built Jerusalem/ In England’s green and pleasant land.”

Fowler, an independen­t academic, is also director of a project called “Colonial Countrysid­e: National Trust Houses Reinterpre­ted”. She said while writing her book, she began “looking at different ways in which the British countrysid­e is connected to the British Empire.

“And because of that chapter, I decided to go to the National Trust and partner with them on a project called ‘the colonial countrysid­e’”.

She has been working with a cooperativ­e National Trust, which looks after 300 stately homes and houses and which has decided to be much more transparen­t about their colonial connection­s, in a large number of cases with India. Quite a few of the properties were built by men who made their fortunes in India when Britain ruled the country.

Yet, according to Fowler, the millions who visit the National Trust properties are mostly unaware of their colonial links – something that is now being put right.

She gave an example – Basildon Park near Reading, “which was owned by Sir Francis Sykes, who was a bit of a right-hand man of Clive of India.

“You have Powis Castle in Wales which has a collection called the Clive collection, which belongs to the descendant­s of Clive of India. And they have things belonging to Tipu Sultan in that museum and many other objects which are extremely valuable and interestin­g to Indians.”

For the past seven years, the National Trust has been working on being more open about the dark chapters in Britain’s colonial history. The Black Lives Matter campaign, which wants some 70 statues removed, has given the National Trust’s process of revealing what was previously either hidden or just not published a fresh urgency.

The declared mission of the organisati­on, founded in 1895, is “to look after Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty permanentl­y for the benefit of the nation across England, Wales and Northern Ireland”.

In a statement, it acknowledg­ed: “For 500 years, British colonialis­m was fundamenta­l to British social, economic, political, and cultural life. This was allied with a belief in white racial and cultural superiorit­y. This is reflected across many National Trust places and collection­s.”

It said about Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire, on which Government House in Kolkata – it is the residence of the West Bengal governor – is based: “The display of Indian and other Asian objects in the ‘Eastern Museum’ at Kedleston Hall is a testament to British imperialis­m in India at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries.

“The objects were acquired by George Curzon (1859-1925), viceroy of India, 1899–1905. By all accounts, Curzon had a passion for Indian art and artefacts, but in recent years we have recognised that our method of display of objects was culturally insensitiv­e. A new project is under way to work with experts in Asian art and history as well as Asian communitie­s to research, interpret and redisplay the collection as much more than the beautiful spoils of Empire.”

Fowler provided examples of other Indian connection­s: “There is Charlecote Park near Stratford-upon-Avon, which has an Indian dress sword which was given to the lady of the house by her sonin-law, who fought in Lucknow in 1857. There’s another place Hatchlands Park, with a number of owners who had strong East India Company connection­s.”

Chartwell, famous for being Winston Churchill’s countrysid­e residence, is also working on the wartime leader’s not very glorious Indian associatio­ns, including allegedly aggravatin­g the effects of the Bengal Famine of 1943.

Fowler said: “Churchill has bcome very contentiou­s in Britain all of a sudden. There was a bit of a scuffle over

his statue between young campaigner­s and people who felt that they had to come to his defence.”

She said of the history taught in schools: “It’s very sad that our curriculum misses out some very important history in the way that we relate it to the rest of the world. I think there’s a 400-year gap in our knowledge collective­ly about Britain, and that covers the colonial period.

“We know all about the Battle of Hastings, the Tudors and World War One and Two, and maybe the Russian Revolution, but we don’t really know much collective­ly about the other parts of our history.

“There’s a little bit about slavery but that is dominated by Britain’s role in abolition. What it doesn’t do is focus on Britain’s involvemen­t for hundreds in transatlan­tic slavery.

She added: “It certainly doesn’t focus much on Partition. And this is a real problem, because Partition is very relevant to lots of children growing up in Britain today who have Indian heritage and living relatives with memories of Partition.”

The National Trust is going for relabeling rather than removal of objects.

“There are a number of things that the National Trust is very interested in doing.

of

years

First of all is integratin­g the relevant colonial history into its main account of each house,” Fowler said.

“It’s most likely to be relabeling and providing the full historical context for these items which relate to the British Empire. But the relabeling is done collective­ly with historians, source communitie­s and others who now have an interest in contributi­ng to that process. So it’s a bit more democratic. But it’s also historical­ly rigorous.”

 ?? © National Trust Images/Trevor Ray Hart ?? DISPLAY DILEMMA: National Trust properties (clockwise from this image) the Georgian mansion at Basildon Park, Berkshire; the Gatehouse at Charlecote, Warwickshi­re; Adam’s South Front of Kedleston Hall; the Jekyll Garden at Hatchlands Park, Surrey; and Powis Castle, Wales; and (inset below left) Corinne Fowler
© National Trust Images/Trevor Ray Hart DISPLAY DILEMMA: National Trust properties (clockwise from this image) the Georgian mansion at Basildon Park, Berkshire; the Gatehouse at Charlecote, Warwickshi­re; Adam’s South Front of Kedleston Hall; the Jekyll Garden at Hatchlands Park, Surrey; and Powis Castle, Wales; and (inset below left) Corinne Fowler
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Arnhel de Serra
© National Trust Images/ Arnhel de Serra

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