Dynasty building, family networks and social capital: alcohol pachters and the development of a colonial elite at the Cape of Good Hope, c. 1760-1790.
Abstract
A hallmark of colonisation was extensive social reconfiguration, leading to
the development of local elites which differed from the metropolitan and
indigenous patterns. Historians of the Cape of Good Hope during the VOC
era have identified the development of a local elite during the eighteenth
century. The Cape gentry, consisting of grain and wine farmers in the
hinterland of Cape Town, consolidated their power and influence over several
generations through capital accumulation in the form of land and slaves, and
through contracting endogamous marriages. This article contributes to this
scholarship by adding a missing dimension: urban entrepreneurs in the form
of the alcohol pachters (lease-holders). It traces how kinship, entrepreneurship
and social capital were used by these people to gain economic advancement,
and how the use of these factors changed over time. The article argues that the
1770s present a change-over from an earlier era when alcohol entrepreneurs
were largely immigrant-based and used their cultural identities to their
advantage, to a system where the urban and rural elites increasingly contracted
business and social alliances. As such this study argues that the foundations
of the Cape gentry lay in more than the accumulation of land and slaves. The
entrepreneurial activities of alcohol pachters in Cape Town and their increasing
alliances with the rural elite played an important role in creating an intricate
network of wealthy and influential elite families at the Cape of Good Hope by
the end of the eighteenth century.