Putting the Tea in Britain: The Scots Who Made Our National Drink
By (Author) Les Wilson
Birlinn General
Birlinn Ltd
15th September 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Tea and coffee
641.33720941
Short-listed for Saltire Society Scottish History Book of the Year 2022
Hardback
256
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 1mm
462g
From the Indian Mutiny to the London Blitz, offering a 'nice cup of tea' has been a stock British response to a crisis. But tea itself has a dramatic, and often violent, history. That history is inextricably interwoven with the story of Scotland. Scots were overwhelmingly responsible for the introduction and development of the UK's national drink, and were the foremost pioneers in the development of tea as an international commodity.
This book reveals how Darjeeling, Assam, Ceylon and Africa all owe their thriving tea industries to pioneering work by Scottish adventurers and entrepreneurs. It's a dramatic tale. Many of these men jeopardised their lives to lay the foundation of the tea industry. Many Scots made fortunes - but it is a story with a dark side in which racism, the exploitation of native peoples and environmental devastation was the price paid for 'a nice cup of tea'.
Les Wilson brings the story right up to date, with a look at the recent development of tea plantations in Scottish hills and glens.
'Rich in fascinating detail and stories ... it deserves to sell like hot cakes washed down with a fortifying blend of Assam and Ceylon tea'
-- Allan Massie * The Scotsman *'[Wilson's] book is overwhelmingly a delight, infused with unstinting research'
-- Hugh Macdonald * Glasgow Herald *'Wilson is an excellent writer, creating an intriguing and compulsive narrative from remarkably thorough and wide-ranging research. Encapsulated in the cup of tea tray on the breakfast table is a history of which few of us are aware, and a history that often reads like a novel of buckled swashes and dos that have been derringed. Even if youre a coffee drinker, 'Putting the Tea in Britain' is a highly desirable purchase'
-- Brian Palmer * Ileach *'The blood-stained story of tea is a fascinating one in which the Scots were front and centre. Les Wilson is a skilled writer who weaves a fast-paced, compelling tale'
* Scottish Field *Les Wilson is a writer and award-winning documentary maker. Among his film credits is the 30-part series Scotlands War, an oral history of the Second World War, and the 13-part series The Real Tartan Army, a TV history of the Scottish regiments. He is the co-editor of Islay Voices (Birlinn, 2016) and the author of The Drowned and the Saved: When War Came to the Hebrides (Birlinn, 2018), which won the Saltire Society History Book of the Year award, 2018.