Norman Rowsell


Norman Rowsell was an Englishman who was one of the first tea planters in British Ceylon. He was also a well known sportsman and became the first Ceylon Labour Commissioner.

Biography

Norman Rowsell was born in Lambeth, England in July 1855, the son of Benjamin Rowsell and Sarah née Norman.
In 1880 Rowsell left England and arrived in British Ceylon, where he settled near Dickoya and he managed Abbotsleigh Estate, which was owned by C. J. Braine, until 1904. In 1883 only at Abbotsleigh were used for the new crop, tea, while were used for coffee and cinnamon. Norman was simultaneously managing an estate called Florence for J.M. Robertson & Co and had previously managed an estate in Battalgalla.
In 1904 the Planter's Association of Ceylon established a Coast Agency called the Ceylon Labour Commission at Tiruchirappalli in India. Norman was the first to manage the office, the objective of which was to assist the immigration of Tamil labourers for the Ceylon tea plantations. When the Commission was started, it was funded in part by the Government of Ceylon, as well as by planters, but later the plantation owners took over all costs. Norman was assisted by a number of Indian and European aides in his duties, one of whom, appointed in 1911, was John Still, the author of Jungle Tide.

Sporting career

Norman was a renowned sportsman and his obituary in The Straits Times described him as “one of the best known Ceylon planters and sportsmen of his day.” By 1883 Norman was the Honorary secretary and treasurer of the Dickoya Maskeliya Cricket Club. Norman’s younger brother Eustace, who was also a planter in Ceylon, had been on the Blackheath F.C. squad in 1891 and Norman was the Captain of Ceylon’s Up-Country XV rugby team in 1892. Norman was also a competent tennis player, competing in the 1889 Men’s singles of the Ceylon Championships at Nuwara Eliya.