East Indians who migrated to Trinidad primarily brought agricultural tools and equipment suited for their farming practices. These included traditional implements like the plough, hoe, and sickle, which were essential for cultivating crops such as rice, sugarcane, and various vegetables. Additionally, they also introduced seeds and plants from their homeland, enriching the agricultural diversity of Trinidad. Their tools and agricultural knowledge significantly contributed to the development of the local agricultural sector.
So as to work on the cane fields
to work in the sugar cane plantation
they came as indentured labourers to work in the cane fields
garlic pork, they brought the christianty to trinidad as well as the spanish and they also brought carnival along together with the spanish and french
mostly Indian but also has Chinese, African, and white plus many more.
They were indentured servants.
The East Indians in Trinidad primarily came from the northern Indian states, particularly Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Punjab. They migrated to Trinidad between 1845 and 1917 as indentured laborers, mainly to work on sugar plantations. This migration was part of a broader trend of Indian labor movement to various British colonies following the abolition of slavery. Their cultural influences remain significant in Trinidad today.
They came here (Trinidad) in 1845.
The first ship of Indian labourers arrived in Trinidad in 1845, on the ship Fath Al Razak (commonly referred to as the Fatel Razack).
In the year 1797 the british came to trinidad
where did the spanish settled in trinidad
netball came to Trinidad and tobago in the 1890s