Tea is one of the most popular
hot beverages in India. You’ll find a tea stall in almost every street corner
in the country. Indian tea has a refreshing aroma and taste, and is enjoyed by
both young and old people all over the world. Darjeeling and Assam in the
North-East and Nilgiri Hills in South-West India are the main areas where
Indian tea is grown.
The Role of East India Company
The valleys of Assam have been
the home to Indian tea for many decades. Indian tea was introduced and
popularized all over the world mainly by the East India Company. It took
advantage of its colonial rule to spread the market for Indian tea all over the
world, mainly in its colonies.
China is said to be the homeland
of tea, where it was produced initially. The British were largely responsible
for popularizing tea throughout different parts of India where it had not
reached before, though tea had its presence in India even before the British
popularized it. Accounts of tea usage have been found in descriptions of world travelers
even before the English occupied India.
Tea Cultivation Begins in Assam under the Guidance of Charles Bruce
It was a well known British
botanist who was the first to encourage the production of tea in India as the
climate was suitable for it. Charles Bruce of East India Company brought tea
seeds and bushes from China. They were sent to the Botanical Gardens in
Calcutta (now Kolkata) for observation and testing. By then the East India
Company had gained complete monopoly over the tea trade and had earned huge
profits by selling Chinese tea all over the world.
The initiative taken by Chares
Bruce to produce tea in India was ignored at that time. By mid-19th century, East
India Company had lost its hold over tea trade. This was the time when it paid
attention to tea production in its colonies, mainly in India. Charles Bruce
then went to Assam to initiate and look after tea production there, as a
representative of the East India Company.
The British Government asked
Charles Bruce to cultivate imported Chinese tea bushes in Assam. Tea seeds
would be first grown into bushes in the Botanical Gardens of Calcutta. They
would then be transported to the tea gardens in Assam. Charles Brooks employed
a team of laborers and tea experts to prepare land in Assam for cultivation of
tea. During those days, tribes and wild animals inhabited the land which was
full of forest cover.
The British Embrace Indian Tea
Charles Bruce was finally
successful in setting up tea plantations in the region. The bushes imported
from China didn’t survive, while the bushes grown in India flourished. The tea
grown in India was appreciated by the royals as well as the commoners in
Britain, leading to the birth of Indian tea, popularly known as chai.

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