Coconut vendors, whether with long-ago donkey carts, ancient Bedford lorries, or ornate new advertising wagons, have been a fixture in Port-of-Spain seemingly forever. Long before bottled water and cheap, plastic bottled soft drinks, the easy way to refresh oneself after a hot day in the city was to pay a penny and have a vendor wield a razor-sharp cutlass across a coconut, guzzle the sweet water and then have it hacked open, so that the jelly inside could be eaten with an improvised spoon made from a chip of the same coconut shell.
One man alone deserves the credit for introducing coconuts to the streets of the capital. Conrad Frederick Stollmeyer was born in Ulm in Germany in 1813 and moved to America, where he clashed with pro-slavery interests, forcing him to flee in 1845. He fell in with another German transient, JA Etzler, who formed a company called the Tropical Emigration Society, which aimed at establishing a perfect colony in Venezuela.
The plan failed miserably and the settlers ended up in Port-of-Spain. Stollmeyer was stranded in Trinidad with a wife, six children and $5 in his pocket. Undaunted, he applied for and received a lease from Lord Harris for some forested mangrove wasteland in Cocorite. He cut firewood, which he sold to raise some cash. No job was too big or small: Stollmeyer augmented his firewood income by washing uniforms for the soldiers stationed at the St James Barracks.
As trees were cleared from the leased land in Cocorite, he hired contract farmers who planted coconuts. A strict teetotaller, Stollmeyer decided to make a valiant attempt at providing the citizens of Port-of-Spain with an alternative beverage to rum. Then, even more than now, widespread drunkenness was a problem in the city, with more than half the detainees in the Royal Gaol being there for alcohol-related offences.
Stollmeyer had green water nuts harvested and loaded on carts, which he sold in Marine Square and on bustling Frederick Street for a penny each. The enterprise was wildly popular, although poor Stollmeyer would have been dismayed to learn that instead of abstaining from rum, the creative inhabitants of Port-of-Spain made use of his cheap coconut water as a capital mixer and chaser, when downing nips of heavy golden liquor or fire-water white puncheon rum.
The determined German went on to make a fortune at Perseverance Estate near La Brea, where, under the patronage of the Earl of Dundonald, he secured several asphalt mining leases, both on the Pitch Lake and on veins near it. Charles Fourier Stollmeyer, his son, constructed in 1904 (the same year of his father's death) the magnificent Scottish baronial mansion around the Queen's Park Savannah, which is still known as Stollmeyer's Castle, even though it passed out of the family in the 1970s.
So whenever you enjoy an ice-cold coconut (refrigeration began to appear on the beds of trucks in the 1960s and 70s), remember Conrad Frederick Stollmeyer.