jamaica-history
A blog on all aspects of the History of Jamaica.
Monday, 25 February 2013
John Grant - Chief Justice
John Grant was one of the few Scots who was able to enter the legal profession on Jamaica. As Scottish law differed considerably from the English law system used on the island, Scots had to retrain either in England or take further exams on Jamaica. Grant kept a record of the cases he had to deal with during his tenure as Chief Justice which survived and are now kept at the Harvard Law School rare library. It is available for online consultation here.
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
Nathaniel Phillips papers
Not much material related to the Welsh on Jamaica during the height of the sugar production on Jamaica has survived. The papers of Nathaniel Phillips give a unique insight into the the Jamaican plantations of the Pembrokeshire merchant. As part of the Slebech Papers, they are kept at the National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth. They have been used extensively by British and West Indian historians who use the detailed accounts to explain the slave-trade, plantation economy and absenteeism. A detailed description by Prof. Kenneth Morgan can be found here, tracing the ownership of the Pleasant Hill plantation. The Welsh historian Dr. Clare Taylor has published a number of articles on Phillips and the West Indies in general. Some of these are shortlisted at the end of Prof. Morgan's article (NB a collection of her articles on the West Indies is long overdue).
Monday, 10 December 2012
Archedeckne family
The Irish Archedeckne (pronounced Archdeacon) family settled on Jamaica in the early eighteenth century and their plantation Golden Grove has been a focus of many studies. Not in the least at part of the correspondence related to the plantation survived. These are principally the letters from Simon Taylor, who in absence of the owner, looked after the plantation. The Irish connections with Golden Grove included the extended Archedeckne family, like the prominent politician Nicholas Bourke. Extracts from the letters can be found here, published by the University of Southampton. Additionally, some letters written by Benjamin Turney, who was the plantation doctor in the 1780s were also made available in this section called 'Letters from Jamaica'.
Saturday, 20 October 2012
Port Royal Archives
The department of Nautical Archaeology at Texas A&M University has done extensive research on the sunken city. Most of the archeological research was completed a few decades ago, but the material is still very useful. The website (by Donny L. Hamilton) itself over 10 years old, but it gives a good impression of the material available and is a great starting point for anyone with an interest in early Jamaican history.
Richardson's of Jersey on Jamaica
Not all white planters on Jamaica were English in the seventeenth century. Members from the Richardson's family who had settled on the Channel islands in the late fifteenth century, moved to Jamaica after its conquest. Nicholas Richardson (death December 13, 1702) was the most prolific. A justice of the peace (1699) and assembly member he married Francis, the daughter of Col Edward Stanton. After his death, a monument was erected in Christ-church, Newgate Street, London. The wills of his brothers are stored here (note this is archived). More details on the family and some interesting letters from the seventeenth century can be found here. The family was possibly French speaking at this stage as is evident in the correspondence. Nicholas Richardson held 1,092 acres possibly through marriage. He had one son.
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
Thomas Thistlewood
Thomas Thistlewood (video) extract enacted.
The papers of Thomas Thistlewood (1721 - 1786) were recently purchased by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Yale) and thankfully remain accessible to everyone. An English overseer and later plantation-owner, Thistlewood kept a diary that was both detailed and explicit. Many historians have used the diaries, and the renowned Jamaican historian Douglas Hall presented large extracts in 'In Miserable Slavery Thomas Thistlewood in Jamaica 1750-85 (Kingston, 1999).
A different approach was taken a few years later by Trevor Burnard in Mastery, Tyranny and Desire - Thomas Thistlewood and his slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican World (London, 2004). He used the diaries in seminars and through these explored a number of different themes with the help of his students. The resulting book gives a fascinating snapshot of the eighteenth century Jamaica. Burnard tackles the issues of power, slave relations, the enlightenment and promiscuity in all its gruesome detail. Interestingly, where Thistlewood remained the central character, others now receive a prominent place.
The papers of Thomas Thistlewood (1721 - 1786) were recently purchased by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Yale) and thankfully remain accessible to everyone. An English overseer and later plantation-owner, Thistlewood kept a diary that was both detailed and explicit. Many historians have used the diaries, and the renowned Jamaican historian Douglas Hall presented large extracts in 'In Miserable Slavery Thomas Thistlewood in Jamaica 1750-85 (Kingston, 1999).
A different approach was taken a few years later by Trevor Burnard in Mastery, Tyranny and Desire - Thomas Thistlewood and his slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican World (London, 2004). He used the diaries in seminars and through these explored a number of different themes with the help of his students. The resulting book gives a fascinating snapshot of the eighteenth century Jamaica. Burnard tackles the issues of power, slave relations, the enlightenment and promiscuity in all its gruesome detail. Interestingly, where Thistlewood remained the central character, others now receive a prominent place.
Tuesday, 18 September 2012
Irish indentured servants in the Caribbean – a guide to sources
The concept of the 'Irish as slaves' in the seventeenth century is topic discussed at length and on occasion with some rather outlandish assertions. The below is a quick outline of some of the material that can be used for the study of the Irish indentured
servants in the Caribbean in the seventeenth century. It focuses mainly on the English
speaking islands as very few Irish went to the French or Spanish possessions on
an indenture.
The book Ireland, slavery and anti-slavery (Basingstoke, 2007) by Nini
Rodgers is essential reading. From page 33 onwards it sets out the historical
context and provides a clear definition, both in the context of Irish history
as well as its relation to black slavery. It also includes various examples and
extensive bibliography. Her points about indentured servitude present a natural
starting point.
Many of the Irish indentured
servants came to Barbados, one of the first English possessions in the
Caribbean. The work of Hilary McD. Beckles is essential. The article: Hilary McD. Beckles, A ‘riotous and unruly lot’: Irish Indentured Servants and Freemen in the English West Indies, 1644-1713 in the William and Mary Quarterly third series, vol. 47, no. 4 (Oct.,
1990) deals specifically with the Irish on the island. It also gives
a good number of references to material on use in further research.
Beckles is also the author of A History of Barbados Cambridge, 2006) and the chapter ‘The ‘Hub of
Empire’: the Caribbean and Britain in the Seventeenth Century’ which can be found in The Oxford history of the British Empire: volume I: the origins of empire (Oxford, 1998). In the same series Ireland and the British empire (Oxford, 2005), Jane Ohlmeyer deals with aspects of the Caribbean
in the chapter ‘Early modern Ireland and English imperialism’. Other writings by Beckles include
‘Black over white: ‘the poor white problem in Barbados slave society’ in Howard
Johnston (ed.) After the crossing, immigrants and minorities in Caribbean creole society (London, 1988) which
considers the legacy of indentured servitude.
The Leeward Islands also presents
some interesting material. Donald Harman Akenson, If the Irish Ran the World: Montserrat, 1630-1730 (Liverpool,
1997) is essential as the island had a predominantly Irish population. Note
that the number of indentured servants was small on Montserrat. However,
Akenson has some very interesting views on the Irish and how they engaged with
a colonisation project. A more recent work is Natalie A. Zacek, Settler Society in the English Leeward Islands, 1670-1776. Cambridge, 2011) – it has one chapter on the English, Scottish and
Irish and her thematic approach on the white settler society on the islands presents some very interesting points.
Recently, an interesting article is
Kristen Block and Jenny Shaw ‘Subjects without an empire: the Irish in the early modern Caribbean’ in Past and Present,
no. 210 (Feb. 2011). They have actually used some rarely used Spanish sources which added a different dimension to the Irish experience in the Caribbean. There is more on these connections in the Irish Migration Studies in Latin America that can be found here.
On primary source materials, Richard
Ligon A True and Exact History of the Island of Barbados was originally published in the late seventeenth
century. It has been reprinted in various formats, although last year’s edition
prepared by Karen O. Kupperman gives a good introduction and gives a great insight into the Irish presence on Barbados in the seventeenth century.
The John Thurloe material can be
found at British History Online and has a lot of correspondence from the
Caribbean. It mentions the Irish on Brabados and the Leewards quite often. It also hold the correspondence between Thurloe and Henry Cromwell (Oliver's son and the commander-in-chief in Ireland) over sending 2000 Irish 14 year olds to Jamaica. The latter never happened as the shipment and holding of the potential deportees was never financially viable.
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