A SHORT HISTORY OF THE Georgetown Chamber of
Commerce and Industry
The Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and
Industry was established under the name "The Chamber of Commerce of the City of
Georgetown" in the year 1889. The formation of the chamber begun at a meeting
with Royal Agricultural Commercial Society and a Commercial Committee held on the
20 the December 1888. Under the initiative of Mr. J. Errest Tinner a sphere of
useful discussions were held and it was decided to merge these two bodies. On
the 17th June, 1889 at a meeting of Merchants and others it was decided to form
a Chamber of Commerce for the City, which should be recognized by law. The
Memorandum and Articles of Association were drafted. These were submitted at a
General Meeting held on the 8 th July, 1889 and the President, Vice-Presidents
and Council were elected.
It was intended for the Chamber to be
registered under the Company's Ordinance in 1864. However, there was no
provision made in the Ordinance for permitting the omission made in the word
"Limited" when registering institutions similar to the Chamber of Commerce. It
was undesirable that the liability of Members should be unlimited. As a result,
the Council petitioned the Governor and Court of Policy to incorporate the
Chamber under a special ordinance. The Petition was favorably received. The
then Attorney General suggested the title be shorten by omitting the word
"Incorporated" and it was entered into the Statute Book as Ordinance No. 4, of
1890.
The Membership roll for the year 1889-1890 was 77. Of these
three were struck off for non-payment of Subscription. The membership
subscription per year was $10.00.
In the pre-independence era, the Georgetown Chamber of
Commerce, as it was then known, was invariably headed by expatriate business
executives and was an exclusive “Club” for men.
Of course, then were Guyanese who were elected presidents of organization, most
of them representing foreign owned companies, for example Bookers, Sandbach
Parker, Demerara Bauxite Company, Demerara Tobacco Company, Sprostons and the
Banks.
The Wight family (Guyanese) who owned two of the three daily newspapers, along
with insurance companies and properties, and business magnate Peter Stanislaus
D’Aguiar, whose company Banks DIH Ltd., were very active in the chamber.
The Gajraj family who operated a merchant and motor vehicle business gave the
chamber its first East Indian President (Guyanese) Mr. Harold Gajraj. His
brother, Mr. R.B. Gajraj was also a member of the Chamber’s Executive Council.
Both the Chamber and the two traditional churches, Anglican and Roman Catholic,
played active behind the scene roles in the administration of the country with
Governor of the day seeking their advice on a number of national issues.
The Annual General Meetings of the chamber were looked upon as special events
and wide coverage was given to these proceedings and speeches by Governor,
representatives of the government of the day, and both the incoming and outgoing
Presidents. It should be noted that not only was the press (Newspapers) in
private hands, (the Wight's), but also the expatriate firm of Bookers, with the
lone Radio Station in the hands of a British-owned company (Reddiffusion), (the
monthly business meetings received ample coverage in the press).
Although the business community under the British was represented in the
Legislature, it was Mr. D’Aguiar, the soft drinks, rum, beer and fast food,
pioneer whose political party the United Force that took the bold step by
entering into local politics and eventually winning seats in parliament.
The United Force subsequently formed a coalition with the Peoples’ National
Congress which was led by Mr. Forbes Burnham, who later became Guyana’s first
Executive President. The coalition did not last long and Mr. D’Aguiar took his
party into opposition with the late Dr. Cheddi Jagan’s Peoples’ Progressive
Party. Their ideologies were poles apart.
With the gradual introduction of certain socialist policies by Mr. Burnham, on
the body politic, the influence of the Chamber began to wane. The Chamber was
once described by Mr. Burnham as a body made up of "Commission Agents”.