PEACE
- POT FOR PEACE, PEACE FOR POT
The HEMP Embassy has always actively
advocated the reintegration of the hemp plant into people's
lives.
In the 1930's Hemp was thrust aside
in the rush to embrace the emerging synthetics industry, and
in the desire to overtake the old hemp industry altogether,
they threw out the baby with the bathwater with a deluge of
negative publicity. The rising temperance movement was targeted
with this publicity, and after the failed experiment in alcohol
prohibition, the movement was left with the prohibition of other
drugs as a consolation prize, which also just happened to allow
a small group of pharmaceutical companies to gain a monopoly
on medical drug production and pricing.
We feel that Hemp has been demonised
by industrial competitors and venal politicians for their own
advantage, depriving humanity of a very useful plant, which,
in the drug context, is far less harmful than alcohol, heroin,
amphetamines, cocaine, or even antidepressants.
World
Hemp History
A
HISTORY OF POLICE RAIDS ON INTENTIONAL COMMUNITIES
IN AUSTRALIA
AUSTRALIAN
HEMP HISTORY
From author John
Jiggen's book: "True
Hemp in Australia",
and other sources.
Before Federation:
1778: Sir Joseph
Banks, "the Father of Australia", the man who sent
hemp seeds on the First Fleet and devised the scheme for a convict
and hemp colony, must be claimed as hemp's Australian Godfather.
1800: As per
Royal instruction, the early Governors of New South Wales -
Phillip, Hunter and King - did their best to encourage the hemp
industry. By 1800, cloth manufacture had begun.
Flax and hemp could both be turned into rope, and in the literature
of the day the term "hemp" was used for any rope-making
plant, in much the same way vacuum cleaners are referred to
now as being hoovers. In New Zealand a fibre plant,
used by the Maori population was noted, and named New Zealand
Flax (Phormium Tenax) and for the next sixty years,
various attempts were made to perfect an economic way to prepare
it. The Maori used to hand beat it. On Norfolk island, work
continued on phormium tenax, and an experimental planting
of European flax was begun. In Sydney, King (now Governor of
New South Wales) set dressers and weavers among the Irish convicts
to cultivate European flax and hemp, and "every woman that
can spin" to manufacture what these others grew. By the
end of 1801, these efforts had produced "279 yards of fine
and 367 of coarse linen" and he sent samples home. In 1801,
King wrote about European hemp which promised "a very abundant
return on the lowlands about the hawkesbury and Nepean rivers"
and "might also be manufactured and sent from hence in
cordage". During his period as Governor, King also had
constructed a manufactory for canvas, sacking, blanketing and
rope.
1802 : NSW's
governor wrote Banks that he had sown 10 acres of "Indian hemp
seeds" that grew "with utmost luxuriance, generally from six
to ten feet in height." The governor and Banks did not seem
to know that Cannabis Indica was any different from European
hemp.
1808
- 1814: Shortage of hemp in Britain due to Napoleon's
blockade. Colonies encouraged to produce hemp.
1813: An expedition
was mounted to New Zealand. Included in the crew was some of
Samuel Marsdens missionaries. (who had contact with the Maori
cheif Ruatara) and Robert Williams, the colonies first rope
maker and flax dresser. By 1814, Marsden had obtained 13,000
acres at Kerikeri and had started a settlement there consisting
of 22 settlers including flax dresser, John King.
After his journey to New Zealand, Robert Williams made a long
submission to the British government about phormium tenax.
Reviewing the efforts by the British to work the New Zealand
"hemp" plant, Williams notes that: Phillip and King
"were at much labor and expense and made great efforts
to bring it to perfection at Norfolk Island...but the best mechanicks
in Europe have failed in their attempts to manufacture it."
Note: "Phormium Tenax", New Zealand Flax. The
terms seem interchangeable or collective in this era, as it
changes from one to the other in the text quoted. European Flax
(Linum usitatissimum) was different to New Zealand flax, and
the New Zealand flax did not easily respond to their efforts.
In his report, Williams claimed that he succeeded in solving
the mystery of dressing the New Zealand plant. He was stretching
the truth.
Very well aware that substantial encouragement was being offered
by the British government for processing hemp, Williams further
offered: "that the British market may be supplied with
large cargoes of hemp and in three years the principle part
of the British navy may be supplied from this territory and
New Zealand at a great saving from the average price of hemp
from the north of Europe."
This proposal by Williams for the cultivation of native "hemp"
in New Zealand and its manufacture into cordage was received
with interest in London and had the support of the commisioner
of enquiry, J. T. Bigge, who came to Australia to report on
the colony's development and agricultural choices as it moved
on from being a penal colony. Australia was now of little use
as a penal colony, difficulties having been overcome, and now
people wanted to come. It was no longer a forbidding destination.
1821: A rope
made by Williams from New Zealand "hemp" was tested
in Chatham rope yard and showed great strength. Mostly hand
prepared (beaten) flax is exported from now to 1860, when a
mechanical method of production is perfected.
1822: Williams
made plans to go to New Zealand but trouble with his debtor,
Samuel Levey, delayed him. (the debts were incurred when two
boats were burnt by the Maori's). To help Williams depart, the
colonial government made arrangements for Levey to be paid in
cedar and land.
Archibald Bell's views on developing the colony: "The
present mode of farming here seems not to deserve the name of
a system. Wheat and maize are indeed almost the only crops raised,
this arises in the market for any other produce
...first, public encouragement should be given to the growth
of flax and hemp, the rich land on the banks of the Hawksebury
and Napean are capable of producing as we know by experience,
the most luxuriant crops, the manufacture of which would afford
fit employment for female convicts and lame men.
...the propriety of cultivating hemp and flax seems strongly
pointed out to notice, as in curing and preparing of so many
hands would be required, and would thus ensure for female convicts,
(and also lame and infirm old men now a burthen to the crown)
a consideration as it respects the female particular of no small
importance to the well being of morality."
Archibald Bell's views were echoed by Provost Marshall John
Cambell in a letter to the new Governor Sir Thomas Brisbane
on February 12th 1822.
(Archibald Bell, who presented the argument for New South Wales
as a hemp colony to Bigge, was the chief police magistrate in
the Windsor area where he was the first paid magistrate and
occupied a government house valued at one thousand pounds. A
member of the New South Wales Corp, Bell had been in charge
of the guard at Government House in 1808 when Bligh was arrested.
After Bligh's arrest, he served as military commandant at the
Hawkesbury, and received a grant of a town allotment and 500
acres at Richmond, and a larger grant of 1000 acres. He was
one of those "with the largest property and highest respectability"
consulted by Bigge, and he was appointed to the Legislative
Council in 1832.)
Macarthur campaigned for a wool industry. We all know the
outcome.
1846: Francis
Campbell publishes the first edition of the only Australian
text on hemp. "A Treatise on the Culture of Flax
and Hemp". This collection of essays was originally
serialised in the Australasian. There were two subsequent editions
of this book in Campbells lifetime. the third edition being
published in 1864. The book was re-published by Wild and Woolley
in 1977, along with a marijuana growing guide. Interestingly,
the copy of the book in the Mitchell Library in Sydney was donated
by John Fairfax MLA, the founder of the Fairfax dynasty.
1856: Victoria
imposes duty on opium: 21,890 kg imported in that year, earning
£56,979 in duty. The goldrushes and the opium smoking
Chinese population they attracted made imposts on opium a good
source of revenue.
1859: Demand
for hemp in Australia is high, but most seems to be imported.
The Sands Directory of New South Wales lists two rope manufacturers
in that year. After 1867 the industry grew and expanded. Between
1859 and 1890 about 39 rope businesses were listed. Only eight
were in existence by 1890 as business life expectancy was apparently
low.
1860:The production
of New Zealand flax fibre on a large scale did not commence
until the late 1860s, when a machine was invented to beat the
green leaf between a revolving metal drum and a fixed metal
bar. Metal beaters on the surface of the drum struck the leaf
at great speed, stripping away the non-fibrous material and
releasing the strands of fibre. This machine (which became known
as a ”stripper”) produced a much coarser fibre than the Maori
hand-dressing process, but one machine could produce about 250
kilograms (a quarter of a tonne) of fibre per day, whereas one
Maori worker (using a mussel shell) could produce only one kilogram
of fibre in the same time. By 1910 the stripper had been improved
to the point where it was capable of producing 1.27 tonnes of
fibre per day.
1868: Colonial
Monthly publishes the story "Cannabis Indica" written
by Marcus Clarke as an experiment while under the influence
of cannabis. He is out to thrill his readership rather than
scientifically record. "Cannabis Indica" is Australia's
first recorded drug writing.
Ian
McLaren has described Marcus Clarke as "essentially the
journalist. He was able to sense a story; he was aggressive
and combative, ready to translate his thoughts into arresting
words that caught the imagination of the public, or aroused
antagonism to his views expressed so forthrightly"
. He was kept busy by the Argus and Australasian, writing leaders
and literary articles and reviewing books and theatre. A series
of articles, 'Lower Bohemia', about Melbourne low life appeared
in the Australasian and were particularly successful, being
"strong pieces of investigative journalism".
1880
- 1890: The use of now prohibited or restricted
drugs was widespread and tolerated to an extent that would cause
outcry today. For example laudanum, a household painkiller available
without a prescription, was a mixture of opium and alcohol and
was used for infants with teething problems. Cigares De Joy,
marijuana cigarettes were available in Australia and, to name
just two of the numerous drug-laced patent medicines available,
Bonnington’s Irish Moss contained opium alkaloids and
Ayre’s Sarsaparilla Mixtures contained opium. In the 1890s,
morphine lozenges did not come under the existing poisons legislation.
Opium was seen as a valuable commodity and was exported in vast
quantities from India into China to balance the British Empire’s
tea trade. The Opium Wars of 1839-42 and 1856-58 broke out as
the Chinese tried to resist the importation of the drug.
1891-1895: Some
early opium bills failed. For example, opium growing farmers
of Bacchus Marsh defeated the passage of a bill ‘to restrict
and regulate the sale and use of opium’. The Sale and
Use of Opium Act 1891 (Qld) controlled opium distribution, essentially
to protect Aborigines from being paid in opium. The growing
awareness of addiction meant growing opposition to free availability.
Opium Act 1895 was applied to South Australia and the Northern
Territory, making it an offence to sell or give to ‘any
Aboriginal native of Australia’.
1897: At the Federal
Convention, Adelaide, March 1897, the drafting of the Australian
Constitution was entrusted to three lawyers shown here: Edmund
Barton (standing), John Downer (left) and Richard O’Connor.
Edmund Barton went on to become Australia’s first Prime
Minister. O’Connor and Barton were appointed to the High
Court in 1903.
Act No 17 of 1897 (Qld) forbade sale of opium to Aborigines.
Sale of alcohol to Aborigines carried a £50 penalty, opium
a £100 penalty.
Post Federation
1900:Federation
of the Australian states into a new country. We are Australia.
1901: States give
up power to levy customs duties although they retained some
Commonwealth duties for some time.
Customs Act 1901 prohibits import of non medicinal opium to
stop recreational use spreading beyond Chinese community. Collector
of Customs grants licences to doctors and pharmacists.
1905:
Commerce (Trade Descriptions) Act 1905 (Cth) - controlled
packaging, marking and marketing of patent medicines (medicinal
opium, morphine, heroin, cannabis and others).
Premiers Conference – decision made to take action against
non-medicinal use of opium under pressure from feminist and
church groups, as more Europeans were believed to be smoking
opium.
Opium Amendment Act 1905 (SA) – risk of fine and imprisonment
if non-medicinal opium sold, bartered or given to any race,
‘Asiatics’ risk deportation.
Opium Smoking Prohibition Act 1905 (Vic) - campaign supported
by Chinese merchants but focuses on Chinese opium smokers.
1907: Royal Commission
in Secret Drugs, Cures and Foods presented to Commonwealth gives
first warning of dangers of heroin, used as cough mixture. Commission
noted heroin in medicine not controlled.
1908: Police Offences
Act (NSW) – offence to sell, smoke or possess preparations
of opium for smoking. The Labor leader, W A Holman protested
at the use of opium being made an offence at law, when used
‘by an adult man who knows what he is doing and is master
of his own actions’.
1910: Joint Commonwealth
State Conference - drugs for therapeutic purposes; dispensing
and labelling of medicines.
Customs Act s 233B(1) - non medicinal opium wide-ranging offences.
Shanghai International Opium Conference was held at
the insistence of USA, supported by European powers, China,
Japan, Siam and Persia.
1912: Hague International
Convention on Narcotics - control production and distribution
of raw and prepared opium (morphine and cocaine); required parties
to Convention to ‘examine possibility of making it a penal
offence to be in illegal possession of’ drugs covered
by the treaty.
1914: Dangerous
Drugs Act (UK) - adopts terms of Hague Convention re control
of drugs in treaty. Western powers more in touch with opium
producing countries.
1920: Australia
implements Hague Convention
1925: Geneva
Convention adds cannabis to Hague Convention narcotic list,
and sets up a permanent Central Opium Board to supervise international
trade in controlled drugs.
|
The late Robert Kendell commented
that
‘a claim
by the Egyptian delegation that [cannabis] was as dangerous
as opium, and should therefore be subject to the same
international controls, was supported by several other
countries. No formal evidence was produced and conference
delegates had not been briefed about cannabis.’
Australia was represented at this
conference. The Commonwealth then wrote to all of the
states asking them to enact legislation to ban Indian
hemp. This is how the NSW Under Secretary of the Colonial
Secretary’s Department replied on behalf of this
state:
‘The
omission of that drug [cannabis] from the operation of
the Act would have been of small moment, but having been
considered by the conference as required to be included,
it might perhaps be as well, if practicable, to bring
it within the purview of the dangerous drug laws’
This sentence explains why cannabis is still prohibited
in NSW today. On this shaky foundation, the mighty edifice
of cannabis prohibition in NSW (and other states) was
built.
Robert Kendell, "Cannabis condemned: the
proscription of Indian hemp Addiction", 2003, pages
98, 143–151
|
1926: Australian
Opium Proclamation prohibiting Coca leaves and Indian hemp.
(This is eleven years before America prohibits hemp.)
1931: Convention
on the Limitation Period in the International Sale of Goods
(New York) - signatories to give estimates of legitimate controlled
drug needs. Embargoes against signatories exceeding estimates.
1953: Ban on medicinal
use of heroin. Overprescription/unnecessary prescription by
medical profession prohibited.
1961: Single Convention
on Narcotic Drugs 1961 (New York) - schedules of drugs adopted
at conference of 71 nations:
Schedule I – opiate narcotics, cocaine and cannabis for
medical and scientific purposes.
Schedule IV – cannabis, cannabis resin and heroin ‘particularly
dangerous’, requiring more stringent controls. Signatories
to Convention to adopt whatever methods necessary. Article 36(1)
requires signatories to make production, possession, importation
and other activities serious offences to be punishable by imprisonment
(when committed intentionally).
1964:Cannabis
found growing wild in the Hunter Valley, survivors from early
Australian crops. Enormous newspaper publicity arouses public
interest. Eradication program begun.
1967: Appendix
to Narcotic Drugs Act 1967 adopted Single Convention. Domestic
manufacturers of narcotic drugs licenced.
1970: American
soldiers on R&R from Vietnam buy local pot and introduce
more potent strains. Kings Cross becomes a known centre for
R&R drug trade.
1971: Convention
on Psychotropic Substances extended beyond narcotic drugs to
cover drugs not listed in Single Convention Schedules. Dealings
to be controlled for medical purposes; more flexibility than
Single Convention.
1972: Protocol
to Single Convention - treatment or rehabilitation as alternative
to conviction or punishment.
1973:
Aquarius Festival at Nimbin. Australian Union
of Student's and Peter Stuyvesants put on a festival that begat
communes and cannabis and publicity.
1976: Psychotropic
Substances Act 1976 incorporated 1971 Convention.
August 12th NSW
Police conduct a pre dawn raid on Tuntable Falls Co-operative,
rounding up 42 people at gunpoint, loading them into a mixture
of vehicles, including a cattle truck. There was a shortage
of pot at the time and only a pregnant mothers stash tin and
a Sunshine Milk tin containing twelve ounces was found on the
entire property. The Police said they would divide it among
us to charge us all.
August
29th The Cedar Bay commune
is raided by Queensland Police. Using a helicopter, a naval
patrol boat and four wheel drives they rounded up the members
of the isolated community. Finding only a small quantity of
marijuana, the police discharged firearms into water tanks and
burned down the hippie's houses before they left. ZZZ
radio broke what would become an international story at the
time.
All cannabis charges made in the course of the Tuntable Falls
raid were dismissed.
Queensland was the same, with compensation sought and gained
by some of the defendants.
1984: South
Australia decriminalised minor cannabis offences with a fine
in expiation of a charge for cannabis use, referral for assessment
with option of treatment and rehabilitation as alternative to
prosecution.
1985: NSW comprehensive
schedule of drugs prohibited except on prescription.
1992: ACT -
small amounts cannabis police discretion re fine (NT follows
in 1995).
First Nimbin MardiGrass Law Reform
Rally held after years of bi-annual helicopter raids
that find little to justify them, unless you believe the bizarrely
optimistic $2000.00 a seedling formula the police employ?
1997: In September
Police use helicopters to raid the Wytaliba community, between
Grafton and Glen Innes in the Mann River valley. Despite being
videotaped they abused their powers by refusing to produce a
search warrant or identification, and using excessive force.
Charges were dismissed and the NSW police force sued.
1999-2000: NSW
small amounts of cannabis - police to direct offender’s
attention to harms and treatment - police cautioning system.
NSW trial of supervised heroin injecting rooms, modifying prohibition.
2000: The 100
or so alternative lifestylers living at Wytaliba were in the
mood to celebrate hard. They'd just been awarded $1.3 million
following an unlawful search by police that happened to be captured
on video - including one policeman saying "we got no warrant".
2004: Medical
Cannabis flagged by Carr, but nothing happens. Howard can block
it.
South Australian expiation notice scheme now only applies to
only a single outdoor plant.
In Western Australia from 22 March 2004 police have the discretion
to issue a Cannabis Infringement Notice to you if you are aged
18 years and over, and found to be:
- in possession of or using no more than 30 grams of cannabis;
- in possession of pipes or implements for use in smoking cannabis
on which there are detectable traces of cannabis;
- growing no more than two outdoor cannabis plants at your principal
place of residence, provided that no other person is growing
other cannabis plants on the same premises.
Federally the Conservatives consolidated at election time.
The size of the mortgage ruled the voters choice. Federally
it is still "zero tolerance".
Raids continue while the drugs of the twenty first century
whistle through our village, stimulants that provoke violence
and vandalism amongst some of the young. The cannabis smokers
are still the same peaceful lot they allways were, still protesting
against unfair laws, still putting on the MardiGrass every year,
still working to make the world a better place.
CREDIT:
Some of the information and points of
view in this Table are taken from John Lonie, A Social History
of Drug Control in Australia, Research Paper 8, Royal Commission
into the Non-Medical Use of Drugs South Australia, 1979 (The
Sackville Commission)
**********************************************
The
Nimbin MardiGrass Law Reform Rally
will be held on the First Sunday
in May every year to encourage Australia to
change its laws, and for all to have a good time.
Remenber, it is easier to argue with the wise, than it is to
argue with the ignorant. Stay cool.
http://www.hempembassy.net/
If you feel you have information that should be included in
this history, or that something is incorrect, feel free to send
that information and inclusion will be considered.......
Thank you for pot smoking and may the force be busy elsewhere
attending real crimes ......
Mail the
Hemp Embassy
World Hemp History