Britain in the nineteenth century played an important role in the improvement of the navigability of the Lower Danube and the development of the ports of Wallachia and Moldavia, and later of the newly-independent state of Romania. Following the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846, and the development of a stronger free-trading approach to agricultural products, there was a considerable British interest in the wheat and corn produced in the region, and exports of British equipment would contribute to the economic development of the new Romania.
In 1837, the son of a Scottish baker named Charles Cunningham arrived in Galati from the Turkish port of Smyrna, and was appointed British Vice-Consul. With an annual salary of £200, he was additionally entitled to engage in business, and continued as a trader as well as a diplomat. Cunningham was preoccupied with the improvement of the navigability of the Danube, which was essential if the British goal of the development of trade was to be met. Of the three main channels through the Danube Delta, the Sulina Channel was considered the most promising for the development of shipping, but the shallow bar at its mouth and its narrow, winding character were major obstacles.
In a prescient report of that year, Cunningham suggested that, if Russia was unwilling to do the necessary work itself to improve the navigability of the Lower Danube, this could be carried out by means of a Commission of interested nations. Russia would not have agreed to such a plan, but its defeat in the Crimean War resulted in the imposition of a formula very like that recommended by Cunningham as part of the Peace of Paris, and in 1856 the European Commission of the Danube was born, with its headquarters in Galati, initially with just a two year mandate, though this was rapidly extended when it became clear that it could not hope to achieve its remit in so short a time period.
Hartley worked for half a century on the Danube, straightening and deepening the Sulina Channel, which was crucial for the development of ports such as Tulcea, Galati and Braila. A bust of Sir Charles Hartley was erected in Sulina last year, standing prominently in front of the former administrative offices of the European Commission of the Danube, which still preserve a boardroom which appears to be unchanged from the days of the Commission, with dark wooden furniture carrying the “CED” monogramme.
British links with the Lower Danube were not confined to the work of engineers and administrators. British trading companies played an important role in the economic growth of the region, among them the Watson and Youell shipping house, based in Galati and with branches in Braila and Sulina. The company was engaged in the selling of Romanian grain on the European market, and in selling British products in Romania. I have written in an earlier blog about Sybille Youell, the beautiful Galati-born daughter of the co-owner of the company, who married Jean Chrissoveloni, a member of a wealthy ethnic Greek family of the area, and set up home in a manor house in the north of Galati county, where they entertained Prince Ferdinand and Princess Marie and later established a field hospital in the First World War tending to injured Romanian troops.
Nowhere gives a better feel for the richness of the British community in the Lower Danube, and of the challenges its members faced, than the international cemetery in Sulina, a town depicted as “Europolis” by the writer Jean Bart, for the diversity of its population, thanks to the European Commission of the Danube and later its status as a free port. There is the grave of William Simpson, the right-hand man of Charles Hartley, who died of malaria in 1870 at the age of 46. Other graves record deaths by drowning, and at the hand of cholera. Benjamin Creber, a “boy” on HMS Cockatrice, lies beneath a tombstone “erected by his shipmates”. And two identical gravestones describe a tragic nineteenth-century love story. It is that of a young officer named William Webster, who drowned in 1868 while trying to save his fiancée Margaret Ann Pringle, who is buried beside him.