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Submitted by Yardbroom
Bussa Statue

We know of Bussa as a Barbados “hero” an accolade bestowed on only a select few of our sons/daughters.ย  A statueย  to represent him in all its nakedness and strength, has been erected on the busy Haggatt Hall highway in Barbados, to remind us of our past.

What do we know of Bussa?ย  It is well documented that he was of African lineage and it is also believed he came to Barbados as an adult slave.ย  He led a slave rebellion in 1816 at Bayleys Plantation in the parish of St Philip and was killed in the ensuing battle.ย  He like some of those who were involved in the rebellion paid the ultimate price for the insurrection.ย  Bussa’s life post the slave rebellion is part of Barbados’ history but I will – withย  much conjecture – in this short submission retrace his steps before Barbados.ย  A tall order because of the lack of specific information that relates directly to Bussa.

It is best to tell you where I am heading, before you are taken on this short journey.ย  I believe he, “Bussa” came from the village of Bussa which is between Birni Yauri and Jessao on the Niger River.ย  Before you ask.ย  It is not simply a matter of choosing a place in Africa with the name of Bussa and supposing he came from there.ย  So a few feasible pointers are required to support my conjecture.

It is believed a large number of African slaves who were brought to the Caribbean were Igbo or Nigerian.ย  Why was he called Bussa?ย  He could have wanted to stamp his identity by stating how he wanted to be called. . . that is my name Bussa.ย  He therefore choose as a name where he was born.ย  Africans saw themselves at the time as being from particular tribes and not just being from a large continent.

People far from their native home abroad are often known to others for example: The Englishman, Scot, American, in Bussa’s case it could have set him apart and given him an identity.ย  To other slaves he was not just a slave he was Bussa which in his mind and to other slaves would have meant something not known to or appreciated by slave masters.

We know that slaves were taken from the village of Bussa the capital of Borgu, we also know Bussa was on the slave route.ย  Richard Lander the explorer 1803-1834 confirmed seeing slaves being taken away from there as late as 1830, despite the Blockade Squadron.ย  We also know the River Niger was used by slavers as a route to the sea.

In one of Richard Landers encounters when he was captured in 1830 he relates: ” . . . “the palaver’s judgment was that they – Richard Lander’s party – should be taken to the Obi or king of the Ibo, who would decide what to do with them.ย  They travelled for three days down the Nun, the delta’s main branch, until one of the Ibos pointed to a clump of high trees and said:ย  “There is my country” he was pointing to the village of Bussa.

I have attempted here to place Bussa in an area in which he could have had a connection, as we know slaves came from there and it would be remarkable indeed if there was no connection.ย  I have no birth certificate to be sure neither is there – to my knowledge – information of Bussa saying where in Africa he came from.ย  I only have a hunch, no more than that but that is my belief.

For those with an interest in specific detail, the town Bussa in Borgu to which I refer in this submission is no longer there.ย  In 1968 the town was flooded for the construction of the Lake Kainji Dam.ย  The town was relocated and is nown called New Bussa.

Perhaps it is fitting that Lake Kainji’s gentle waves lap the earth he once trod and the statue representing “the man” Bussa at Haggatt Hall gazes to the skies, for in spirit at least the message is. . . . forever free, forever free, “Free” at last.

Acknowledgement:ย  The Story Of The Niger River
The Strong Brown God
Sanche de Gramont
Book Club Associates : London 1975

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152 responses to “Searching For Bussa: An African Slave And A Barbados Hero”


  1. there is no empirical evidence to support the view emphatically that bussa started the rebellion at bayleys plantation.various historians have offered conflicting views.


  2. @Yardbroom

    Do you have a perspective to share about the fact that much of the history of this time was written by Whites and therefore to weave a true picture of that time is a very delicate undertaking?

  3. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    Yardbroom

    I must compliment you for your honesty. It is clear that you are not a local historian because if you were you would have presented your research as a definitive statement of the History of Bussa. Others were knighted for a lesser effort so from now I will think of you as Professor Sir Yardbroom. LOL.

    While that was meant to be funny, I am serious that your research is far better than the nonsense that Professor Sir Woodville Marshall presented as the History of Rock Hall, St. Thomas. Something for which he should have apologized to the people of Barbados long ago.


  4. An easy way (but not necessarily definitive way) of checking if Bussa was an African name is to go to ancestry.com and search the 1817 register of slaves in British Colonial dependencies.

    http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=1129

    Put in Keywords 1817 to restrict the search to 1817 otherwise you will get from returns of 1820, 1823, 1826, 1829, 1832 and 1834.

    I found two names, one in Barbados and the other in Jamaica.

    Then choose a name of undisputed African origin and see what turns up.

    I tried Quasheba.

    I found 1,162 in various places including Barbados, Jamaica, St. Christopher, Nevis, Antigua, Grenada and St. Vincent.

    Cuffy gave 670 instances, again distributed among colonial dependencies.

    While it is possible that very few slaves may have come from Bussa, I have tended to think that Bussa is not a name of African origin.

    If I try Busso, I get 15, all of them in Barbados.

    If I try Bussoe, I get 36, all in Barbados except one who was in St. Christopher.

    It is possible Bussa is a corruption of Busso or Bussoe but I feel these other names are Barbadian and not African in origin because they were not distributed among various other colonial dependencies.


  5. where the statue of the white slaves that were here first???????????????
    about 20 or more years before Africans were brought here.
    the ones that built the sugar industry and were worked to death.
    where is their statue????????????
    and they could have bussa a bit more handsome don’t you think.!


  6. In the British West Indies, plantation slavery was instituted as early as 1627. In Barbados by the 1640s there were an estimated 25,000 slaves, of whom 21,700 Were White. [22] It is worth noting that while White Slaves Were Worked to Death in Barbados, there were Caribbean Indians brought from Guiana to help propagate native foodstuffs who were wellโ€‘treated and received as free persons by the wealthy planters. “…White Indentured Servants Were Employed and Treated, Incidentally, Exactly like Slaves…” [23]


  7. don’t like to hear dat nuh.!
    but it is a fact.whites slaves were enslaved before and in Barbados before blacks from Africa.


  8. Harry

    White people put up a Nelson (Black people too cowardly to move he or tek he down). White people could put up a White Bussa if they want, go long and do em nah. Cause Black people have NOT put up a Bussa statue to this day. That obnoxious thing in the roundabout is The Emancipation Statue … It ain’ got one shite to do with Bussa, who is still to be honored (along with your chosen White POW) appropriately.


  9. I wonder why no one mentions London Bourne,from all accounts an African slave,who bought himself out of slavery and owned three plantations Dayrells,Friendship and Grazettes,he also owned the Bridgetown Club and rented it to the merchants and planters of the day.He had a shipping company,he owned slaves and presumably he traded in slaves.He later retired to Africa with some of his family and friends.This was a self made man who used the system of the time and made it against the odds in the capitalist world of the time.The first Bajan entrepreneur.
    We however prefer to debate whether it was the freed mullato Franklin or the slave Bussoe who led an uprising,which from all spoken historical accounts from our ancestors was to get Bayleys for Franklin and make him Franklin,Emperor of Barbados


  10. My man London Bourne was a merchant hear. He was one of a number of Blacks who were in the kind of business that the time. Sorry, for me he deserves NO honour. His owner manumitted him and I do not believe that there is any record of him “buying his freedom”. For all intents and purposes he could very well have been offering special services for reward as per Aristotle Onassis. FWI It was his daughter who got married to one of Barclays’ (Barclays Bank made its initial capital from slave trading) sons and crossed the Atlantic to Liberia and to help create the elite grouping that governed that country and terrorized its indigenous peoples for decades to this day.

    Give me a break with this London Bourne foolishness …!


  11. BAFBFP

    Try searching for slaves named Nelson, or Horatio in the link I put up.

    Horation Nelson was a hero to all Barbadians, slave and free!!


  12. @ David July 17, 2012 @ 5:47am

    It is quite true that the history of that time of which we speak, was written by whites and therefore we have their interpretation of events. I have seen contemporary writings of the 16th,17th,18th, and 19th century which are nonsense in light of what we know today. One has to make a judgement from a variety of sources to get as near as possible to the truth. However, we cannot live in an empty room, the period of which we speak is so dark that if one looks at contemporary works, do steady yourself for the details can be harrowing . . . but that is life.

    Hi harry
    It is a fact that some indentured white servants and other whites were sent to Barbados and a few were not in a position to resist because of their circumstances. [It Is true before the blacks] . They too should be remembered but their number pales into insignificance beside the “many millions of black slaves” who were the engine that drove sugar production and the wealth that followed.

    I have written a simple essay on one Black man in Barbados from a historical perspective, and you have sought to turn it into some sort of RACE WAR . . . .grow up and be an adult.
    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
    The Lord Nelson of which some people take great pride of in Barbados. ” When he was stationed in Carlisle Bay and wrote to his dear Fanny in Nevis, took a sarcastic pleasure in heading some of his love letters from Barbados “Barbarous Island”

    Acknowledgement:The cradle Of The Deep
    Sir Frederick Treves,Bt.,
    Pub: John Murray, London, First Printed 1908.
    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
    Hi John
    My thinking is there is a Village in Africa Bussa, there could be a corruption of the word Bussa into Bussoe as that was not unusual at the time for example Barbados in some early writings is Barbadoes note the [e]. in this case it does not matter a lot, nothing to pursue.

    Hi Caswell Franklyn
    I tried to be as honest as I could be and where there was doubt or conjecture I made that clear.


  13. Yardbroom

    I am always reluctant in doing genealogical research to make an assumption as more often than not I am proven wrong.

    Bussa is also an old English surname.

    Here is a reference to a baptism.

    https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NFC2-R5D

    Likewise Busso.

    https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JQ37-19P

    … and Bussoe

    https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NLVC-Q9H


  14. yard fowl.
    whites were slaves long before blacks .period.roman times.
    you was there?
    you should just grow.and a famous bajan suck out my ras—-.
    fill in the dots.
    sorry you all cant keep whining but millions of whites were also enslaved.
    before Africans who by the way were sold by their own people[also black]
    who gives a funk/ whiner.
    ya know planes does fly from here everyday to your beloved motherland.
    book a ticket.see ya

  15. mash up and buy back Avatar
    mash up and buy back

    Please ignore this harry character he is on a past blog on ‘indian racism against africans’ and he posted a lot of slime against ‘black’ persons.I think he speaks of himself as of indian descent.He just wants attention.

    Please don’t feed the troll.


  16. Harry

    When the Romans were enslaving Whites they were doing the same to Blacks as well. In fact the poor Black people knew of slavery well back to the time of the Egyptians.

    John.

    Slaves are NOT expected to be knowledgeable people. If any of them believed that Nelson was their hero this would simply demonstrate the level of IGNORANCE that existed at the time. In any event, these enslaved people had little choice but to accept the opinions of the dominant group of the day. This incidentally is why there is a vibrant Christian community today. Agreed?


  17. Harry

    There is a story of a Black Centurion who led a column of Black soldiers in defense of some Christian effort. Maybe these people were not Black but dark skinned from the South of Italy or something (you know Black historians, they love to spread their nets wide when it is convenient to do so) but when mention is made of Black slaves, particularly the Gladiators who were always outfitted with trident and net, there is no doubt that these slaves were Sudanese Black Black Black


  18. King David, he was a black man.
    King Solomon, he was a black man.
    King Moses, he was a black man.
    From Africa, yeah!

    They fight for equal rights,
    And justice for the people.
    They trod through the coast of Africa,
    Showing the light to the people.
    But everywhere, they crucify,
    They kill them, yeah!
    Many prophets rise in Africa,
    Showing the light to the people.
    They trod through the coast of Africa:
    Israel, Egypt, gotta hear.
    Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, in Africa, yeah.
    Oh, yeah.. it’s true.


  19. BAFBFP

    Slaves are NOT expected to be knowledgeable people. If any of them believed that Nelson was their hero this would simply demonstrate the level of IGNORANCE that existed at the time. In any event, these enslaved people had little choice but to accept the opinions of the dominant group of the day. This incidentally is why there is a vibrant Christian community today. Agreed?
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Please don’t lump my ancestors with some preconceived image you may have swallowed of a slave as some IGNORANT beast of burden.

    The IGNORANCE of which you speak exists today in both the highly educated individuals, the dominant group of the day, and the educated people they brainwash into accepting their opinions unquestioningly based on their questionable assumptions.

    The slaves who you disparage by your comments had far greater knowledge than many educated persons of today.

    The only reason you can disparage them is because you happen to be alive and they are long gone.


  20. John

    Many of my ancestors were also slaves and I will be honest with you, it is a fact that I take NO pride in. And yes it is my opinion that the truly brave and proud ones among them would have chosen death over being a stool pigeon to White people. Now here is the thing. I prefer to “believe” that they were just plain ol’ IGNORANT (as opposed to DUMB, though judging from a significant proportion of their decedents I must leave that door open too) because ignorant people are easier to manage, and believe me, Bajan slaves were the easiest of the bunch …!


  21. We keep harping on the non de plume character called “Bussa” But, who or what is really this person who historians keep tainting the past praising a no-named, no-family, no-nobody character called Bussa. How come we were able to trace Sam Lord, who lured ships into a bay and rob them of their bounty. Why is it that during the 1816 revolution at Bayleys you can trace a slave called Washington Franklin and we can furthe trace his modern day family as the Franklins, During the said 1816 uprising, the architect behind the revolution was actually Washington Franklin, it is he who was hung in the area below Purity Bakeries for being part of the rebellion. As a matter of fact, slaves who were trouble makers met their death on the gallows in the full view of the public. If our historian can give data about the first running water from Bowmanston to Bridgetown during 1816, yet none of them can give you the real name of Bussa. Maybe, the powers that be who made Bussa a public hero was selfish to acclaim the real revolutionist call Franklin since the Franklin twins are strong DLPite. Lets here from Karl Watson, Marshall and all those historians who keep hiding our history.


  22. BAFBFP | July 17, 2012 at 9:53 PM |
    John

    Many of my ancestors were also slaves and I will be honest with you, it is a fact that I take NO pride in. And yes it is my opinion that the truly brave and proud ones among them would have chosen death over being a stool pigeon to White people. Now here is the thing. I prefer to โ€œbelieveโ€ that they were just plain olโ€™ IGNORANT (as opposed to DUMB, though judging from a significant proportion of their decedents I must leave that door open too) because ignorant people are easier to manage, and believe me, Bajan slaves were the easiest of the bunch โ€ฆ!
    +++++++++++++++

    How do you know that Bajan slaves were the easiest of the bunch?

    I suggest it is because somebody told you over and over again and you chose to believe them.

    I can’t believe you know because I know it is impossible for you to know!!

    You have never met any!

    Your belief that slaves were DUMB/IGNORANT and COWARDLY is founded on your imaginings and because somebody you trusted told you so.

    You can’t say slaves blindly did as they were told …… but I am telling you that you are!

    Your masters have you believing what they want you to believe and now you are propagating their message.


  23. John

    My man I live in a world packed with human beings that are the product of their culture. I do not have to meet a slave to know that the bunch of them were cowardly and ignorant (again as opposed to stupid), I just have to look at their descendants and the culture that has evolved. The leaders are the product of the society and the society is the product of its history. Education in Barbados may be free but its effectiveness is not of major concern since ignorance is a key factor in propping up our West Minister style of government and the blatant consumerism that is used to measure its success.

    Keepin’ up ol’ chap ..?


  24. The Irish slave trade began when James II sold 30,000 Irish prisoners as slaves to the New World. His Proclamation of 1625 required Irish political prisoners be sent overseas and sold to English settlers in the West Indies. By the mid 1600s, the Irish were the main slaves sold to Antigua and Montserrat. At that time, 70% of the total population of Montserrat were Irish slaves.

    Ireland quickly became the biggest source of human livestock for English merchants. The majority of the early slaves to the New World were actually white..
    ignore this-http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/the-irish-slave-trade-forgotten-white-slaves/


  25. why you think bajans have ans say Irish words and slang and accent in their
    language.
    huhhhhhhhh


  26. how about this .-bussa a cap in ya a–.
    bussa move.
    lol


  27. ignore this too———-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wilberforce


  28. Irish slaves were on the ships that took and claimed Barbados.
    before any Africans were on this island.


  29. BAFBFP | July 17, 2012 at 11:49 PM |
    John

    My man I live in a world packed with human beings that are the product of their culture. I do not have to meet a slave to know that the bunch of them were cowardly and ignorant (again as opposed to stupid), I just have to look at their descendants and the culture that has evolved. The leaders are the product of the society and the society is the product of its history. Education in Barbados may be free but its effectiveness is not of major concern since ignorance is a key factor in propping up our West Minister style of government and the blatant consumerism that is used to measure its success.

    Keepinโ€™ up olโ€™ chap ..?
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I won’t deny humans have failings.

    I grew up among people who used forks and hoes and people who as have been described here wore corkhats.

    I saw cowardice in both groups but I also saw fortitude, courage and the will to go on no matter what hurdle was there.

    I have lived long enough and seen enough people in various parts of the world to realise that there is always a herd who follows blindly and does what is expected but there are also mavericks.

    I have also seen that depending on the circumstances, a member of the herd can become a maverick. It is something in each of us, part of being human.

    …. and while I am on family names, did you know that Maverick is also a family name and at one time Mavericks lived in Barbados.

    I am told they emigrated to America and went to Texas ……. and that is how a maverick gets its name!!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maverick

    I was just looking at the extract from the will of Nathaniel Maverick of St. Lucy, proved in 1673.


  30. John

    Yours is fair comment but know this … in slave societies (and I will not tussle over whether Irish and Scots were POW’s as opposed to kidnapped slaves) all mavericks were exterminated one way or the other, so to my mind, that left the ignorant and the cowardly to carry on. In the US many attempts were made to enslave the indigenous people, Navaho, Seminole etc and they failed. These people would rather starve themselves to death than be enslaved by another… Slavery is nothing to be proud of, no part of it, on either side …! If I could only forget. I hope somebody writes a book and labels it “The Willing Slave”, that should open some eyes as to what the hell really happened back then … My God


  31. Hi harry July 17, 2012 @ 5:12PM
    Quote:. . . .”you should just grow up.and a famous bajan suck out my ras—
    fill in the dots”
    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
    The Black slaves had to learn many “labouring” things from the likes of you “harry” but what is very evident, it was not possible for them to learn decency,dignity and honesty.

    Now you may rant and vent your spleen and in so doing have the last word.


  32. Slavery is nothing to be proud of, no part of it, on either side โ€ฆ! If I could only forget.
    +++++++++++++++++++++

    … but you never experienced it so how can you forget.

    It is not in your consciousness to forget.

    What you want to forget is what you have been told or what you read, not what you know from personal experience!!

    …. what your imagination has led you to believe!!

    Sure there were day to day instances that those who experienced slavery would want to forget but I am sure there were also day to day instances that they would have remembered as good and made life worthwhile.

    But they are gone now.

    There are experiences in my life I would love to forget, and they don’t include slavery, but I can’t.

    Some of my ancestors were slaves and some were slave owners.

    Big deal.

    I sure can’t change anything in the past.


  33. David has inadvertently hit the nail on the head when he refers to the difficulties encountered when trying “to weave a true picture of that time.” There can never be a true picture…all we the professionals or amateurs can do, is to attempt an educated guess about the kaleidoscope using incomplete evidence, since roughly 90 per cent of past historical evidence has vanished. @ Tell Me Why…I can’t agree that historians keep hiding history…we don’t but for a number of reasons, most of us tend to write for esoteric academic journals that only us of the profession read. I make an honest effort to communicate with all…I come on this blog or other media forms from time to time to comment on debated issues of history such as this one. But I agree, historians can be snobbish and tend to look down on those who write popular history…maybe the profession needs to “lighten up” and reach out. @BAFBFP..you are perfectly correct…there was no effort by the sculptor to project an image of the mythical Bussa/Bussoe…he was commissioned to commemorate an idea/an event…Emancipation…the later renaming came as part of an orchestrated campaign. @Yardbroom..we have very tenuous evidence about the man called Bussa…but don’t let that deter you…counter factual history can give a different perspective at best and can be entertaining. @ BAFBFP a number of claims you make are either erroneous or cannot be substantiated. I strongly disagree that “slaves are not expected to be knowledgeable people.” The enslaved were far better informed than most people can even begin to surmise…in all sorts of endeavours…construction, engineering, design,crafts, agricultural practices, on the list goes..they were not ignorant of international events either…which gives the lie to the “white people put up Nelson”..it was a majority white effort..yes..but free coloured and slaves also contributed…and non whites took great civic pride in the statue..even in my youth. John is right on the points he has made, as he so often is, because of the immense quantity of detailed research he does. Regarding London Bourne..why should he not be honoured because he was a merchant..he was a merchant against the odds…and if you don’t like that..what about his efforts (along with others) for education and sanitation and bring clean water to Bridgetown. Every body has omitted the real mercantile hero Joseph Rachel, born almost half a century before London Bourne. @ Harry…it is fine to be passionate and passion is emotion so that often colours what we say or write…but it is not right to resort to crudity to get a point across..it is ill mannered and you weaken your argument.


  34. “Lord Nelson … it was a majority white effort..yes..but free coloured and slaves also contributedโ€ฆand non whites took great civic pride in the statue.”

    Now you see had they known better they would have done otherwise … Come on man, these people were just plain ignorant and were prepared to worship anything British … Sure Nelson was a hero to the property owning class, but those people who were still in servitude who thought it appropriate to applaud the effort should be shunned as ignorant, or retarded or both. Nelson ensured that Barbados remained British … so what. Had we been made French the vast majority of those alive at the time would still be enslaved.

    This is like George Washington or Simone Bolivar who engaged a super power to ensure that the private operations (in the countries in which they resided) no longer had to report to outside interests. Their campaigns had nothing to do with the interests of the vast majority of peoples in the country who simply had to report to a different set of masters.

    And so on …


  35. And by the way Dr Watson

    Of course slaves were little more than animals so when conversation took place around the dinner tables of the plantation’s hierarchy there was never a need to whisper and keep thing secret as these near animals as they entered the room to perform their duties. So I guess from that perspective as well you might want to claim that they were an enlightened bunch …

    Sir, with respect … give it a rest ..!

  36. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    BAFBFP

    Once again you have me agreeing with you. The Dr. Watsons, Professor Marshalls and the Harry’s of this world have always been used as agents for brainwashing the masses. It is people like them who were responsible for the foolish spectacle of poor ignorant black taking their children to Bridgetown and telling them to say good morning to Nelson’s statue.

    They were so influential that they were able to convince some nitwit(s) in the Arthur Administration to declare Bussa a national hero and also to erect a monument at Rock Hall, St. Thomas to the slaves who were so comfortable with their enslavement that they refused to participate in the “Bussa” rebellion.


  37. Caswell

    “Once again you have me agreeing with you”
    My man you never agree with me yet …ha ha ha. .. You sure you alright tonight? Sleep it off man, you will feel better tomorrow … haha ha … Try l’il Goat’s Milk … HAHAHA


  38. @Karl Watson

    Given the fickle process which can affect the final story we paint of history one wonders why many are prepared to argue from extreme positions.Given the nature of man there is little doubt that history like religion has been manipulated to influence behaviours and decisions.


  39. David | July 19, 2012 at 2:07 AM |
    @Karl Watson

    Given the fickle process which can affect the final story we paint of history one wonders why many are prepared to argue from extreme positions.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    …. because the extreme positions are espoused/suggested by “experts” and become political positions without being questioned by disinterested observers.


  40. …. with no political axe to grind!!


  41. I seem to remember that maybe 10 years ago Hilary Beckles wrote in The Sun of a trip he had made by road from Port Harcourt to ‘Bussa’ just outside of Ilorin. There, he said, he was hailed by the locals as coming from Barbados – the great land of the great Bussa – and was feted accordngly.

    I remember thinking that the ‘centre of excellence’ must have got it wrong – and not least because you simply could not make that journey by road in the time he suggested.

    @ Karl Watson

    You would remember this?


  42. It has been mentioned here about the supposed “cowardice” of the slaves in Barbados. It is perhaps pertinent to make a comment about that.

    The treatment of Slaves in BARBADOS was about the most “cruel” in this part of the world: Barbados Slave Code 1661 saw to that. The Colonial Legislature thus provided a legal basis for slavery.
    Quite a few of the Slave Codes in the Southern states of America were patterned on that of Barbados.

    “South Carolina’s code of 1712 was almost a copy of the Barbadian code; Georgia’s code of 1770 duplicated South carolina’s code of 1740;
    and later the Gulf states borrowed heavily from both. In the Upper South, Tennessee virtually adopted North Carolina’s code, while Kentucky and Misouri lifted many passages from Virginia’s.”

    Barbados’ planter class certainly set down a framework for the “type of slavery” that existed in this part of the world.

    Now to that word of “COWARDICE” what were the Black slaves in Barbados up against.

    The BARBADOS SLAVE CODE 1661: “Ostensibly sought to protect slaves from cruel masters and masters from unruly slaves; in practice, it provided far more extensive protections for masters than slaves. The law required masters to provide each slave with one set of clothing per year, but it set no standards for slaves diet, housing or working conditions. However, it also denied slaves even basic rights guranteed under English common Law, such as the right to life.

    It allowed slave’s owners to do entirely as they wished to their slaves, including mutilating them and burning them alive, without fear of reprisal.”

    Someone mentioned Irish indentured servants in Barbados even slaves. However ,I cannot find evidence of many of the Irish being mutilated or burned alive – not in Barbados- which was common for BLACK slaves.

    Any comparison of The Irish to Black Slaves does not stand up to close scrutiny with regard to : Numbers;Time period (centuries); Treatment, Enslavement of their Children; Unborn Children of Black Slaves being left in wills to Plantation owners’ children etc .

    To make a “real comparision” in any credible essay would be met with astonishment.

    .

  43. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Yardbroom | July 20, 2012 at 4:07 AM |

    Your contribution is most informative and in some case emotionally harrowing to us with fore-parents of African descent. From all accounts African slaves were psychologically, physically, sexually, culturally and materially exploited to the max. Reading into your analysis is a clear comparison between what attended black people during the Atlantic Crossing and the plantation system for hundred of years and those recent atrocities committed against European Jews during the 1930โ€™s and WW11 by the Nazi regime. The holocaust seems to have a number of similarities with the Middle Passage journeys.

    Since we have academically established a clear case of exploitation, abuse and even genocide against Africans brought to the Caribbean with the most brutal treatment inflicted to those in โ€œBarbadoesโ€ donโ€™t you think, Yardbroom, itโ€™s time we โ€œacademically freedโ€ Bajans swallow our false pride about being highly educated and seek some form of justice, retribution and most of all restitution in the form of REAPRATIONS to honour the memory of our brutally treated black ancestors?

    Donโ€™t you think its time we stop we all of these exercises in historical accuracies, academic histrionics postmortem analyses and do something meaningful and cathartic to the really fulfil the true goals as symbolized in the Statue of Emancipation aka โ€˜Bussaโ€™ or โ€˜Bussoeโ€™ or whatever?

    Let us put pressure on the Barbados government -now controlled, at least symbolically, by the docile brainwashed descendants of the same cruelly exploited and mutilated (both physically and psychologically) black slaves- to immediately seek REPARATIONS from Britain before we sever all ties and become a republic. The longer we avoid this confrontation the harder it would be to prick the historical conscience of the white British who themselves will soon become an insignificant majority in the UK; the same way the blacks in Barbados are an insignificant majority as far as ownership and control of the countryโ€™s economic resources are concerned.


  44. Things were tough for servants and slaves in Barbados.

    Ligon was here in 1649 and provides a source of information.

    http://humanities.uwe.ac.uk/bhr/Main/white_labour/conditions.htm


  45. Hi millertheanunnaki July 20, 2012 @ 8:14AM

    What has surprised me over the years is how little Barbadians know of “Barbados Slavery” as it was different in execution in many aspects to the other Caribbean islands and the Southern States of America. Barbadian planation owners were known for their “barbarity” and when they travelled it travelled with them, for example it was remarked:

    “In South Carolina successful slave owners such as the Middleton family from Barbados, established a system of “Full-blown, Caribbean style slavery”. The Middletons settled on land near Charleston, Carolina’s main port and slave-trading capital”.

    I have done most of my history research abroad and so have some other Barbadians, however it could be because I do not belong to any faction and am less encumbered.

    May I quote from The Journal of Negro History, Volume 2, 1917 a note with reference to Barbados:
    “The resulting barbarous treatment of the slaves have made the little island famous in history” . . .

    “For a hundred years” says Johnston “slaves in Barbados were mutilated, tortued, gibbeted alive and left to starve to death, overworked, underfed, obliged from sheer lack of any clothing to expose their nudity to the jeers of the poor whites”.

    I will not raise my voice above a “whisper”, but I will speak the truth in all its nakedness.
    – – – – – – – – – – –

    You asked of my view of reparations. Many nations have sought reparations for various issues and I know that view has been expressed by the descendents of African slaves in America. Reparations can assist the disadvantaged and can in some limited way atone, even facilitate further examination.

    My view – a very personal one – is that level of barbarity for so many centuries with so many millions in that dark period, cannot be in any way be compensated for, because of what slavery has done to Black people and the percepton of them it has left.. However, I would not argue against reparations.


  46. On the Slave Code – it would be interesting to read what it actually says rather than a quotation of someone’s views about it.There is so much of that about. The passage quoted says that it denied the ‘right to life’ which was well known to the common law. Sorry – that is nonsense. The concept of the ‘right to life’, as with other human rights expressed IN THAT WAY, is a C20th invention.


  47. On the matter of seeking reparations against HMG – will the government of Nigeria be joined with HMG in this endeavour?


  48. On the white conscience – forget it – as a fact and as a putative moral imperative. Does anyone actually believe that the sins of the parent are visited on the children – in this case the collective sins of the great great great x 5 grandparents on their collective grandchildren – other than through genetic make-up? In that case HMG had better look sharp and seek redress against Germany, Norway, Iceland, France – oh yes, and against India and Pakistan (for the bloody celts).

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