Plantation

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            Plantation

              106 Archival description results for Plantation

              106 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              Wolf Fund, Ludwig
              HA.01.0253 · Fonds · 1885-1886, (1887-1889)
              Part of Royal Museum for Central Africa

              Colonial quarry: "Tagebuch 1885-1886; Central Afrika. XIII. Heft", Handwritten and typed copies of one of Wolf's diaries (December 12, 1885 - March 17, 1886) in which he describes Luluabourg, a newly built and already prosperous city (rice plantations, manioc, corn, beans, groundnuts and sugar cane), his interviews with Chief Kalamba, his passage to the station of Luebo, his embarkation on the En Avant with the aim of going up the Sankuru to the future Lusambo (confluence of Lubi-Sankuru), then his discovery, upstream of Pania-Mutombo, of the falls that will bear his name. Documentation: Photo-portrait (1887); Announcement and article on the death of Ludwig Wolf (1889)

              CO 879/117/2 · Item · 1912-1916
              Part of The National Archives

              Reports on various matters relating to the Cameroons; includes communications and economic questions, the railway and navigation, cocoa and rubber plantations of the Buea district, German administration and proposals for future administration, the Botanical and Research Gardens at Victoria, and notes on those districts to remain provisionally under British administration (68 pages).

              6055 · Fonds · 1906 - 1907
              Part of Archives New Zealand

              Papers consist of forms filled in by plantations detailing what was grown and how much they yielded. Details are also given of the animals kept, staff employed, and acreage of plantation. In 1955 the German Consul's archives were discovered in Apia with the records of the German Colonial Administration. These were removed and transferred to the National Archives of New Zealand for extensive conservation work and microfilming. The decision was made to document the German-Samoan agencies and record series as if they had transferred the records in 1914 - which is why the Executive Council of Western Samoa, although the 'true' transferring agency, is not fully documented.

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