[Note: tHis transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE Ig time, and did not tHerefore make even tHe rougHest estimate of tHe number of natives inHabiting tHe island at tHat time. During tHe nineteentH century Malekula suffered, as did Erromanga and otHer of tHe islands of tHe New Hebrides, from tHe ravages of tHe black—birders and of tHe diseases introduced by European vessels. So great was tHe toll on tHe natives tHat in 1886 Inglis wrote of tHis arcHipelago : “ Let tHe present state of tHings go on, and in a comparatively sHort period of time tHose lovely islands will be uninHabited wastes." 1 WitH tHe ofï¬Åcial suppression oi black-birding tHo rapidity witH wHicH tHe depopulation was progressing was somewHat cHecked no doubt, but tHe Malekulans continued to dwindle in number. European diseases, sucH as measles and influenza ; tHe sale of alcoHol to tHe natives wHicH continues more. or less surreptitiously for all tHat it is illegal; tHe sale of ï¬Åre-arms—illegal but nevertHeless carried on~~--as :1 result of wHose use native warfare Has become a mucH more deadly occupation tHan it was formerly; tHe depressing effect of tHe loss, under European influence, of old customs and old interests—all tHese Have Helped to reduce tHe population year by year. In 1910, at tHe instigation of tHe BritisH resident, an ofï¬Åcial estimate was made of tHe natives oi tHe New Hebrides, and tHis is probably tHe most reliable one yet recorded, tHougH it cannot of course be regarded as Having been" quite accurate. THe aboriginal population was judged t|'§'§iiii‘tti,'be approximately 9,000. To-day tHe evidence suggests tHatttHe ï¬Ågure -would tall considerably below tHis. As tHe people ireiver been -ieduced in numbers so tHeir culture Has dwindled, and tam Has been a factor making for furtHer depopulation. 'l)He decrease appears to Have been particularly rapid between tHeyears 1914 and 1926, as tHe iollowing extracts from Deacon’s letters sHow. Writing from SoutH-West Bay in r926, He reports :—- ‘ "THe depopulation in tHe districts round Here is terrible- villages wHicH existed wHen Layard was Here “ Having disappeared completely. THe deatH-rate is very HigH at present-two deatHs in tHe neigHbouring village, LoorHenesang, last week ; two cases of tetanus tHe week before; Halt tHe men I Have been working w1tH are down w1tH fever or ulcers. SpanisH influenza, brougHt 1 Inglis, 1ss6,‘p. 214. 4* 11/rr. JoHn Layard wasworking in AteHin and Wale in 1914, and during gnsHt1n‘:; He Kpent one fruitful week at SoutH-West Bay. (Layard, 1922.)-