By the mid-eighteenth century, observers of the emerging overseas British Empire thought that Jamaica—in addition to being the largest British colony in the West Indies—was the most valuable of the American colonies. Based on a unique set of historical lists and maps, along with a variety of other contemporary materials, Jack Greene’s study provides unparalleled detail about the character of Jamaica’s settler society during the decade of the 1750s, as the first century of British settlement drew to a close. Greene’s sources facilitate a close examination of many aspects of the island’s development at a particularly critical point in its history. Analysis of the data generated from this material permits a fine-grained account of patterns of landholding, economic activity, land use, social organization, and wealth distribution among Jamaica’s free population during a period of sustained demographic, economic, social, and cultural expansion. Calling attention to local variations, the study puts special emphasis on the complexity and vitality of Jamaica’s settler population, the island’s economic and social diversity, the ubiquity and adaptability of slavery, the character and size of settler households, the range of urban professions, the value of urban housing, and the gender and racial dimensions of wealth holding. Greene’s detailed analyses amplify and enrich these subjects, offering the most refined portrait to date of Jamaican society at a crucial juncture in its formation and providing scholars a quantitative base for analyzing Jamaica’s political economy in the second half of the eighteenth century.
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Colonel Daniel Axtell (1622–1660), captain of the Parliamentary Guard at the trial of King Charles I at Westminster Hall in 1649, was hanged, drawn, and quartered as a regicide during the Restoration. William Axtell, who represented ...
Dominique Rogers and Stewart R. King, “Housekeepers, Merchants, Rentières: Free Women of Color in the Port Cities of Colonial Saint-Domingue, 1750–90,” in Women ... Douglas Catterall and Jodi Campbell (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 375, 378–79.
Russell Menard argues that the emergence of black slavery in Barbados preceded the rise of sugar.
Transients to Settlers: The Experience of Indians in Jamaica, 1845-1950
Plantation Jamaica analyses the important but neglected role of the attorneys who managed estates, chiefly for absentee proprietors, and assesses their efficiency and impact on Jamaica during slavery and freedom....
... 126, 213 Beckles, Hilary, 231 Bell, Dr. Samuel, 242 Bellamy, Mr., 81 Belle Isle estate, 43 Bennett, Elizabeth, 165 Bennett, Sarah, 185, 236 Berlin, Ira, 177 Black Act (1723), 268 Blake, Hannah, 71, 81, 109, 114, 219 Blake, Nicholas, ...
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either...
Thomas Thistlewood (1721-1786) was a British estate overseer and small landowner in western Jamaica.
Shows how Japanese anxiety about overpopulation was used to justify expansion, blurring lines between migration and settler colonialism. This title is also available as Open Access.