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The tea estate in Ambanad hills is set up by the British people it is the only tea estate in Kollam district. The plantation and estate is controlled and managed by Travancore Rubber and Tea Company. The estate falls in Clove belt of India (Kollam - Nagercoil) and is one of the largest Clove estate in the country. [4]
On 23 July 1999, a large number of labourers from Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Tea estates of Manjolai congregated in Tirunelveli and marched towards the Collectorate demanding the release of a number of estate workers, who were arrested earlier for staging protest demanding better wages. The workers were being paid ₹70 per Day then and ...
There are three tea estates in the Manjolai area — Manjolai Estate, Manimutharu Estate, and Oothu Estate. The estates are on elevations ranging between 2,300 and 4,200 feet (701 and 1,280 m). The estates, road, and the settlements in the Manjolai area are managed by the Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ltd.
The museum is part of the Lockhart Estate, [1] which is one of the earliest tea plantations in High Range (Munnar), established by Baron John Von Rosenberg and his son, Baron George Otto Von Rosenberg [2] in 1879. [3] Initially they planted cinchona then coffee and afterwards tea. [4] The building, which houses the museum, was constructed in 1936.
There are three Tea Estates within the Manjolai area – Manjolai Estate, Manimutharu Estate and Oothu Estate. The Estates are located on elevations ranging between 700 and 1,280 metres (2,300 and 4,200 ft). [citation needed] The estates, road and settlements in the Manjolai area are managed by The Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ltd.
The KDHP Tea Museum is an industry and history museum situated in Munnar, a town in the Idukki district of Kerala in South India. Tata Tea Museum is its official name, but it is also known as Nullathanni Estate where it is located, [1] or Kannan Devan Hills Plantation (KDHP) Tea Museum.
Tea garden in Sreemangal. Bangladesh is an important tea-producing country. It is the 9th largest tea producer in the world, [1] [2] producing a total of 97.08 million kgs in 2019. [3] Its tea industry dates back to British rule, when the East India Company initiated the tea trade in the hills of the Sylhet region. [4]
Places and tea estates in the southern portion of Darjeeling Sadar subdivision (including Jorebunglow Sukhiapokhri CD block), and Mirik Subdivision in Darjeeling district CT: census town, R: rural/ urban centre, NP: national park/ wildlife sanctuary, TE: tea estate Abbreviations used in names – TG for Tea Garden (town/village), TE for Tea Estate