Bodies and Structures 2.0: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History

Chimmo (Shenhu) Bay

“I expect the coast will take off at least 5000 chests of the new Bengal drug, providing we are not interrupted by the Mandareens.  Merchants from other ports make a point to come here for their opium."

John Rees in Chimmo Bay to William Jardine in Canton, 1.18.1836* 


Shenhu Bay (深滬灣), known to the British opium merchants as Chimmo (also Chimo, Chimmoo), is an inlet approximately four miles across and strategically situated between the large ports of Xiamen and Quanzhou. The bay is big enough to provide shelter in rough seas, but small enough to defend effectively. As the above photograph and below video both illustrate, anyone with access to the water would have seen the British opium ships, which were anchored in the bay every day between 1833 until 1860. Any boats from shore that visited the ships would also have not been able to do so in secret, unless at night.

With Xiamen twenty-five miles to the south and Quanzhou fifteen to the north, the bay was perfectly suited for Jardine-Matheson's purposes: it was far enough away from the seats of local officialdom to avoid constant and direct surveillance, yet close enough to the ports to feed off commerce. Shenhu Bay remained an important opium smuggling depot all the way until 1860, when implementation of the 1858 the Treaty of Tianjin de facto legalized the importation of opium.




*Source:JM:B2 7 [R. 495, No. 74] Rees to Jardine, 1.18.1836 

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