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24. Jamaica: Rich and Poor

p. 285

he was worth nearly £3,000 at the time of his death: Burnard,
Mastery, Tyranny, & Desire
, 40.

p. 285

some 35 worth more than £1500. Walvin,
Trader, the Owner, the Slave
, 170.

p. 286

he only got three or four hours’ sleep out of 24: Moreton,
West India Customs and Manners
, 51.

p. 286

‘a dull, cheerless, drudging life’: Stewart,
A View of the Past and Present State
, 189.

p. 286

‘Crakka Juba’: TD, 5 February 1758.

p. 286

Patrick May, was said to be ‘in his house all day, drunk’: ibid., 23 May 1763.

p. 286

‘Yesterday afternoon John Groves like a madman amongst the Negroes’: ibid., 6 January 1761.

p. 287

Ten per cent of those who held wealth owned two thirds of the island’s total: Burnard,
Mastery, Tyranny, & Desire
, 40.

p. 287

from 17 shillings per hundred weight in 1733 to 43 shillings in 1747: Deerr,
History of Sugar,
2:530.

p. 287

By 1750, nearly half of the sugar imported into the UK came from Jamaica, which also had the most productive mills: Hall,
In Miserable Slavery,
xxi.

p. 287

‘not only the richest but the most considerable colony at this time under the government of Great Britain’: Browne,
Civil and Natural History of Jamaica
, 9.

p. 287

worth between 20 and 30 times as much as the same man in Britain or North America: Burnard,
Mastery, Tyranny, & Desire
, 15.

p. 287

In 1774, per capita wealth in England was around £42; in Jamaica for a white man it was more than £1,000. Brown,
Reaper’s Garden
, 16.

p. 287

in Jamaica the average sugar plantation in 1750 had some 200: Burnard,
Mastery, Tyranny, & Desire
, 41.

p. 287

‘While we have so profitable a mine above ground’: Deerr,
History of Sugar
, 1: 175n.

p. 288

owning about the same again, spread across 12 of Jamaica’s parishes: Sheridan, ‘Planter and Historian’, 40.

p. 288

‘frequently Lyes with Black women’: Craton and Walvin,
A Jamaican Plantation
, 77.

p. 288

‘rich a man as William Beckford, for possessions but in debt’: TD, 1 September 1757.

p. 289

‘High Living’: John Fuller to Rose Fuller, 10 August 1733, Crossley and Saville,
Fuller Letters
, 63.

p. 289

‘Mary Johnson Rose of J’ca a free mulatto woman formerly my housekeeper’:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, vol. 299, (July-September 1905), 593.

p. 289

‘Abundance of Business’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 52.

p. 289

was rich enough to be lending money to Richard Beckford: Crossley and Saville,
Fuller Letters
, 253.

p. 290

‘surprising to see the number of Coaches and Chariots which are perpetually plying’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 27.

p. 290

Dresden ruffles, silver buckles and expensive belts and swords: J. Arch. Inventories, Book 36, 1756: Thomas Thompson,

p. 290

‘and appear with as good a Grace’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 34–5.

p. 290

‘extraordinary good Actors’: ibid., 27.

p. 290

‘the noblest and best edifice of the kind’: Long,
History of Jamaica
, 2:7.

p. 290

‘suffered to decay’: ibid., 2:3.

p. 290

some 1,200 free blacks or mulattoes: ibid., 2:103.

p. 291

‘incredible number of … grog shops’: Moreton,
West India Customs and Manners
, 35–6.

p. 291

‘The People seem all sickly’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 1.

p. 291

153 pregnancies, which produced 121 live births Burnard,
Mastery, Tyranny, & Desire
, 220–222.

p. 291

‘An Account of negroes and Stock dead’: William Mackinen to Redwood, 24 March 1757, LNHA.

p. 291

‘One, two, tree’: Renny,
An History of Jamaica
, 24.

p. 292

the proportionate, few whites died at an even greater rate: Burnard, ‘“The Countrie Continues Sicklie”’, 71.

p. 292

20 per cent of the town’s population dying every year: ibid., 53.

p. 292

‘great charnel house’: ibid., 50.

p. 292

‘Creolians … seldom live to be above five and thirty years’: Buisseret,
Jamaica in 1687
, 240.

p. 292

compared to two million in the Thirteen Colonies: O’Shaughnessy,
An Empire Divided
, 7.

p. 292

in the same time the population of some of the North American colonies had increased tenfold: Burnard: ‘A Failed Settler Society’, 64.

p. 292

‘They console themselves, however, that they can enjoy more of the real existence here in one hour’: Long,
History of Jamaica
, 2:285.

p. 292

‘keep late hours at night: lounges a-bed in the morning’: ibid., 1:375.

p. 293

as much alcohol per white as was consumed per capita in the United States in 1974: Burnard, ‘A Failed Settler Society’, 68.

p. 293

‘the appearance of being ten years older than they really are’: Waller,
A Voyage to the West Indies
, 26.

p. 293

he had lost to disease two wives and 16 children out of 21: Samuel Martin to Charles Baldwin 22 Feb. 1776 BL Add. MSS 41351, fol. 65.

p. 293

‘anarchic individualism’ of the West Indies: Burnard, ‘A Failed Settler Society’, 72.

p. 293

‘The frequent occurrence’ of death: quoted in Brown,
Reaper’s Garden
, 58.

p. 293

of the 136 who had arrived on a ship 16 months earlier, 122 were dead: TD, 26 April 1759.

p. 293

‘No Sett of Men are more unconcerned at [death’s] Approach’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 1.

p. 294

‘lack of public spirit’: Long,
History of Jamaica
2:26.

p. 294

dwarfing the number of boys from North America by a factor of about seven: O’Shaughnessy,
An Empire Divided
, 21.

p. 294

preferring ‘gaming’ to ‘the Belles Letteres’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 38.

p. 294

‘carried no Gods with them’, going instead into ‘the wilderness of mere materialism’: J. R. Seeley, quoted in Beckles,
Inside Slavery
, 124–5.

p. 294

‘have built in those islands as if we were but passing visitors’: Froude,
English in the West Indies
, 256.

p. 294

‘animates their industry and alleviates their misfortune’: Edwards,
Thoughts on the Late Proceedings
, 29.

p. 294

‘incessantly sigh for a return’: quoted in O’Shaughnessy,
An Empire Divided
, 3.

p. 294

One third of Jamaican plantation owners were absentees by the 1740s, two thirds by 1800: ibid., 4–5.

p. 295

In St Kitts, half the property was owned by absentees in 1745: Pitman,
Development of the West Indies
, 39 fn 82.

25. The Sugar Lobby

p. 296

Herald
newspaper, 23 August 1797: quoted in Keith, ‘Relaxations in the British Restrictions’, 16.

p. 296

‘Sugar, sugar, hey? – all
that
sugar!’: quoted in Pares,
Merchants and Planters
, 38.

p. 296

trebled between 1700 and 1740, and had doubled again by 1770: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery
, 21.

p. 296

as invented by Rebecca Price: Shephard,
Pickled, Potted and Canned
, 163.

p. 297

‘Sugar is so generally in use’: Long,
History of Jamaica
, 1:525.

p. 297

12 to 16 pounds of sugar be used with every pound of tea: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery,
28.

p. 297

willing to accept factory discipline in order to afford their luxury stimulants: Davis,
Inhuman Bondage
, 88.

p. 297

‘Among the lower orders … industry can only be found’: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery,
35.

p. 297

importing more than twice the amount as much more populous France: O’Shaughnessy,
An Empire Divided,
72; Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery,
24.

p. 297

British livelihoods in the West Indies colonies depended on it:
The Country Journal or the Craftsman
, 5 June 1736, quoted in Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery,
345–6.

p. 297

‘their rum is excellent of which they consume large quantities’: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery,
346.

p. 298

rum imports into England and Wales had risen to two million gallons: ibid., 347–8.

p. 298

‘a constant Mine whence Britain draws prodigious Riches’: Leslie,
A New and Exact Account of Jamaica
, 354.

p. 298

‘necessary appendage to our present refined manner of living’: Browne,
Civil and Natural History of Jamaica
, v.

p. 298

‘the principal cause of the rapid motion which now agitates the universe’: Williams,
Capitalism and Slavery
, 105.

p. 299

‘that excited the indignation of every honest man who became acquainted with the transaction’: Cundall,
Historic Jamaica
, 304.

p. 300

Francis owned lands in Hampshire and Surrey, as well as a house in Albermarle Street London: Sheridan, ‘Planter and Historian’, 41.

p. 300

‘there were scarcely ten miles together throughout the country’: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery
, 473.

p. 300

stocked with the best furniture, objects and paintings that money could buy: Alexander,
England’s Wealthiest Son
, 34–5.

p. 300

‘where expense has reached its utmost limits in furniture and ornaments’: Warner,
Excursions from Bath
, 119.

p. 301

‘with the appearance of immense riches, almost too tawdrily exhibited’: Climenson,
Passages from the Diaries
, 166.

p. 301

‘there was no such thing as a borough to be had now’: Sheridan,
Sugar and Slavery
, 66.

p. 301

‘West Indians’, able to ‘turn the balance on which side they please’: quoted in Penson,
Colonial Agents
, 228.

p. 301

‘West Indies vastly outweigh us of the Northern Colonies’: Franklin to Collinson, 30 April 1764, quoted in Beer,
British Colonial Policy
, 136.

p. 302

his ‘intelligent and perfect’ ‘comprehension of its essential interest’: Long,
History of Jamaica
, 1:122.

p. 302

‘which he could not parry’: Cumberland,
Memoirs
, 97.

p. 302

‘hence somewhat out of place in City epicurism’: Redding,
Memoirs of William Beckford
, 1:28.

p. 303

‘He is of a very agreeable disposition, but begins already to think of being master of a great fortune’: Lees-Milne,
William Beckford
, 3.

p. 303

such as that of 1758 against French slave forts in Africa: Hotblack,
Chatham’s Colonial Policy,
16.

p. 303

‘great guns fired out at sea’: TD, 16 February 1757.

p. 303

‘plundered Mr Thos. White’s house’: ibid., 7 December 1762.

p. 304

only 3,000 men still in action out of an original force of nearly 15,000: Rodger,
Command of the Ocean
, 286.

p. 305

several prisoners had been taken by their cruisers four times in less than two months: Stout,
Royal Navy in America,
16.

p. 305

‘sewed in the hinder part of his britches or drawers’: ibid., 17.

p. 306

‘a lawless set of smugglers’: Beer,
British Colonial Policy,
83.

p. 306

‘illegal and most pernicious trade’: Taylor and Pringle,
Correspondence of William Pitt
, 2: 320–1.

p. 306

‘the large supplies they have lately received from their good friends the New England flag of truce vessels’: Stout,
Royal Navy in America,
17.

p. 306

he was taken to Williamsburg: JCBL, Obadiah Brown Records, Series IV, Maritime records, Sub-Series F: Brigantine
Prudent Hannah
.

p. 306

In fact the
Prudent Hannah
carried 47 barrels of flour: Rhode Island Historical Society, Providence, RI, Obadiah Brown papers I, Series 2, Subseries 4, Box 2x, Folder 5:1758 Vice-Admiralty Court Case against brig
Prudent Hannah
, Virginia.

p. 306

‘they Looked on me as an Enemy and Trator to my Country’: letter of 26 August 1758, JCBL, Obadiah Brown Records, Series IV, Maritime records, Sub-Series F: Brigantine
Prudent Hannah
.

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