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Submitted by Colonel Buggy

Old_Barbados_17The recent re-introduction of the modified stand pipe and the issuing of buckets by the Barbados Water Authority, have given our Super Highway and Fast Food- reared generation, […]
a small glimpse of what life was like for their grandparents.

Following is an excerpt from a draft of a book that I am yet to get published, or given a title. Some provision titles that I’ve been playing around with are :- A bitter taste of Sugar, Did Mr really Harding burn?, Lord of the great house and Down by the nigger yard.

Chapter 2 The Plantation Great House.

Today more black Barbadians have visited Government House in the 49 years since independence ,that in all of the 350 years prior to that,that we are so happy to brag about and celebrate.

The great house stood aloft, like an English castle, in the midst of the green sugar cane fields, uninviting and foreboding. The message loud and clear and still is in many circumstances. “ DANGER KEEP CLEAR” And to enforce that ‘no -go’ policy was an army of fierce “big breed’ dogs, Alsatians, English bull dogs, the lot. But with all of these pedigreed, expensive and pampered dogs, the plantation owner always kept a couple of common breed dogs. I recall an instance as a boy, coming up in St Joseph, at a time when most, if not all, of the parochial administrations were conducted around the village of Horse Hill. The Post office, the Dispensary, the Almshouse , the Parochial Medical Officer ,or Doctor, the Parochial Treasurer, the Mortuary and the Parish Church.

The road to Horse Hill for many of us was long and winding, through Castle Grant, Branch Bury, Coffee Gully, Blackmans and Tamarind Hall. However this distance could have been reduced by less than a half, by accessing Horse Hill via Castle Grant Gully, near the village of Little Island and emerging on Surinam Road. A few more yards could be further cut, by going directly through Castle Grant Plantation Yard, passing just yards to the front of the great house itself. This is where the fun started. You kept an eye out for the two massive English Bulldogs, and sure enough they would be lying down in the great house veranda, with eyes half closed watching your every movement, and with no intention of disturbing their mid-day post lunch rest. But as you attempted to gingerly tip toe past them, the silence of the day was broken, by the loud and constant yapping of the common breed mongrel, who by this time is making a beeline towards you, with teeth snarling.

The two English bull dogs, seeing this commotion taking place, would very reluctantly get up, to let the master see that they were earning their keep, and proceeded to join in the chase at a slow speed, stopping, and giving up at the end of the yard gap where it joined the public road. Not so with the mongrel. He would not be satisfied until he had chased you down the Braggs Road or the Chimborazzo Road, intent in sinking his teeth in your backside.

The plantation dogs appeared to be almost human in their behaviour, or to put it another way, some of the plantation people behaved just like those dogs. For instance the plantation owner, or manager, would pass someone grazing a sheep or cow on the plantation’s grass which make up the hedge along the side of the road, and would usually pass without saying a word, but along came the plantation watchman, with his trademark size 12 guava stick, and like the mongrel, wanted blood, seizing the animal from the owner and carrying it in “the yard”, where the owner was forced to pay a small fee to recover it.

For some reason, as if I did not know, it was always easier, or preferable, for brown-skinned women to obtain employment in the great house as maids and servants. These women worked literally from sunup until sundown. They got in early to prepare the plantation family’s breakfast, and stayed on late preparing the evening meal,and washing and cleaning up afterwards.

When a great house worker got home, all tired and worn out, she had very little time for her own family. In some cases great house work was a seven day job. The great house family, seemingly, could not care less, as long as their needs were met.

Many a man used to complain that in the course of their jobs, these women prepared some of the finest dishes for the plantocracy, but when they got home, late of course, they would hastily slap something together, and summoned them with a “ Ya food here!”

But still, you had to have some sympathy for these poor women. Some were lucky to have a home and a family to go home to, as a good few of these women were employed as live -in servants. For the live-in servant, it was a liv-ing Hell. Live-in , they called it, but the poor servant was accommodated in a little hut, not much bigger than the average out -house of that day. It was located far from the great house, on the edge of the great house grounds, abutting the nearby cane field. There were no toilet facilities, no electricity, no running water, and was mostly a one door/window combination affair. Conditions were far better for the plantation dogs and other animals. And because they lived in, work started earlier and ended much later, and especially if the plantation family was hosting a function.

Many of these live-in maids were treated with the least respect by the mistress of the great house and her children. The master had his own ideas, and would give these poor women extra duties looking after his personal affairs., especially during those hours when the mistress of the house was comfortable tucked away in her bed. Many a boy friend visiting one of these maid’s quarters after hours , had to jump through the back window, if there was one, or hide under the bed when the master came to collect his night cap.

To many young women, maid work was a way of life,and in those days when jobs for women were so scarce and limited, they had to take anything that came along, the master included.


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101 responses to “The Good Ole Days?”


  1. I like the title bitter taste of sugar ..very apt. But is this what this was all about that the good old days weren’t good for everybody or why a lot of whites and blacks have the same name? Is there not enough books like that, tell your story, about your experiences, with some of your interactions with the good and the bad characters on the island, more human interest if you will ,if there is unfairness show how you overcame it, show that nothing could keep your from your destiny. It should be titled …48 hours….. wait that is already gone.


  2. What is your problem Lawson…. the ‘facts’ bother you?
    The book sounds good as shiite…. Bushie will be buying one as soon as Buggy publishes.

    Obviously the Colonel just finishing up the last chapter now…. where we all end up right back where we started – thanks to the mongrels that have taken over our parliament …and who are chasing our asses right back into the plantation tenantries while playing house-boys to the local and imported albinos who have replaced the ones from the last century…

    Brass bowls indeed!!!!


  3. BT no problems,just see it as a waste of time rehashing your slavery past when your great great great grand children will be telling of the times they had to run by the drug dealers house or pay them a ransom for there possessions in your time today . My joke about the show 48 hours is how I see Barbados heading Paradise lost…another great title of a book, but alas already taken.
    I notice AC is keeping a lower profile as more of that cowan stuff comes out is that why you seem a little ornery this morn


  4. very interesting Sir…….especially the description of the difference between the mongrel dogs and the pedigre dogs

  5. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Colonel Buggy:
    “The master had his own ideas, and would give these poor women extra duties looking after his personal affairs., especially during those hours when the mistress of the house was comfortable tucked away in her bed.”

    That stated fact of life goes a long way in explaining why there are so many mixed-breed humans (mulattoes and brownies) in Bim.

    One wonders if it is widely known that the average “black” Bajan male carries at least 25% of Caucasian DNA. Now how did this come about? Certainly not through licit unions between Europeans and Africans?

    Looking forward to your published book. The proposed title: “A Bitter Taste of Sugar” sounds rather catchy and appropriate to the Barbadian society and its experiences with racial relations.
    “Down by the Nigger Yard” also sounds good and relevant but political correctness might put a damper on its circulation especially if you want to reach Bajans in the Diaspora who still feel ashamed of their slavery/plantation origins.


  6. @ Miller…
    Bushie may be biased, but the obvious title seem to be:
    “How they moulded Bajan Brass Bowls”


  7. Many books and movies have been written and made of World War 2 ,and the Holocaust, but we never describe them as rehash.
    In the late 60’s some of us, while on exercise in the area, decided to pay a visit to the Belsen Concentration Camp, which was badly signposted, and even up to less than a kilometre away. When the locals were asked for directions to the camp, they acte as if they had never heard of it.
    That is why when General Eisenhower, crossed the Rhine, and paid a visit to Belsen,which was liberated by the British, he rounded up all of the local residents in the surrounding areas ,and march them to Belsen camp to observe what went on there under their noses, as , he said ” some day some bastard will want to say that this never happened.”


  8. millertheanunnaki November 4, 2015 at 10:01 AM #

    One wonders if it is widely known that the average “black” Bajan male carries at least 25% of Caucasian DNA. Now how did this come about? Certainly not through licit unions between Europeans and Africans?
    ……………………………………………………………………………………
    There were some licit ones. Like my grandfather ,the son of one ofthe biggest land owners in St Joseph, who left the great house and came down to the village and married my grandmother . He was immediately disinherited,and lived in poverty until his death in the early 1940’s.

  9. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Buggy…I will be buying your books for sure, Belsen Bergen camp of Germany is still immortalized in the US today in a jail called Bergen County in New Jersey, don’t let anyone deter you. The young black people need to know where they came from or they will be forever drifting into nowhere, just ask the local bajan leaders..


  10. Sorry Col. but after a while it all starts to sound the same, you had my interest till it started to sound like the bad white people again. I have to remind myself like in poker you play the game your in. If you pander to one audience and get great reviews by playing to their sensitivities maybe that is good enough for you, but having a more rounded approach which you from your background can offer may bring all the players in the game together. I say game because we know its money that makes the world go round, and your grandpa leaving it for love is a way better story to be told than the white massa came skulking around when his wife asleep.


  11. Well Well & Consequences November 4, 2015 at 11:03 AM #

    The young black people need to know where they came from or they will be forever drifting into nowhere, just ask the local bajan leaders..
    ………………………………………………………………………………………………….

    Interesting statement……..my generation knew that we came from West Africa,sold by our own kith&kin,knew about the slave/servant status of our forebears,knew why an uncle/aunt were very fair and others dark,saw progress from renting land to owning land from tennantries to plantations.Some had their own servants as well and the cycle goes on.

    With all of this knowledge we have still produced todays lot.

  12. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Good point Vincent, yet in speaking to both older and younger generations in Barbados, you find too many still don’t know or believe that they are the product of Africa and you still get the lot everyone on the island is now saddled with, so it appears the problems run even deeper.


  13. @Well Well & Consequences November 4, 2015 at 11:25 AM #

    We do know that we are a part product of Africa(or a whole product like all humanoids are out of Africa) and by virtue of our forebears being sold into slavery by their kith&kin and some of us having experienced the attitudes of various individuals from various countries/tribes in Africa,some like me are quite happy to embrace the Caribbean and paddle our own canoe ignoring the ancestral claptrap.


  14. @ Colonel Buggy:-

    I like what you’ve shown in regards to your book’s contents. The comments regarding the changes. If you do this in order to gain publication, or sales. Then the REAL TRUTH would die another slow death.
    I don’t see why you shouldn’t let the truth be told where we came from. How we have been treated. And STILL is being treated. Everyone else’s stories has been told many times over. And even has museums of their struggles.

    The picture with the coconut vendor looks like around the Orleans area.. I do remember a lot about the coconut vendors and the mauby lady, the hot sauce lady that sold the hot sauce by the ladle made from the dry coconut shell made for that purpose. So called black Bajans were MORE CREATIVE.

    I laugh every day when I hear, or see the word recycle. Bajans were recycling from when I was a boy. You wouldn’t even throw away what they called a tot ( A ovaltine, or milo can, or even an ordinary condense milk can. The Tin Smith took care of all of that, and sold them back for drinking utensils.
    I remember people standing at the stand pipes having conversations, or even taking a bath. I STRONGLY believe if we taught our children where we came from, and how to appreciate what we have gained, and to know that THE STRUGGLE ISN’T OVER. And we have to continue to work COLLECTIVELY IN ORDER TO ACHIEVE, OR ACCOMPLISH EQUALITY. Because for sure the so called white man DON’t want us to ever be EQUAL.
    So PLEASE get your book published ASAP. And I am not a racist, but I have seen and experienced the so called white man’s way of thinking he’s given us our freedom, but yet we must speak when it alright for him, or to him.

    How can you ever get anywhere, if you never knew where you came from, and continue to feel that we’ve made it? The younger generation seems to think clothes and bling makes a man or woman out of them. That’s far from the truth.. OWNING THE LAND THAT YOU’RE ON IS IMPORTANT. Because if the so called white man has his way he’s going to work dam hard at having it all. And we’ll be right back to being field hands.

  15. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Vincent…..I supposed it’s a matter of opinion. I suppose one can also ignore the European claptrap.


  16. @Well Well & Consequences November 4, 2015 at 12:35 PM #

    Yup………No mother Africa or Father Europe,purely a new tribe called Caribbean.

    As an exercise can you name the possible tribes and locations in Africa that you may have descended from.

  17. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Not yet Vincent, at some point in time I will go through ancestry.com they are now famous for pinning down your dna to any village in Africa or cave in Europe.


  18. @Well Well & Consequences November 4, 2015 at 12:51 PM #

    That is what is lacking ancestral knowledge as opposed to “ancestry.com”.

  19. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Actually Vincent, all ancestry.com does is tell you were in Africa or Europe, which tribes you share dna with, the ancestral knowledge, you have to garner on your own, as long as the demographics are pointed out, the other research is all yours, which is not bad, before dna we knew nothing, since the 90s when dna started, we have come a long way


  20. @ Colonel B….Good stuff. Sounds as though it makes for good reading. When publishing please appease my curiosity/bajan maliciousness and use your real name. Lol


  21. Well Well

    You have forgotten to take into consideration the fact that one’s ancestors may have arrived from different tribes, as well as different parts of West Africa on one’s mother’s and father’s side of the family by the may fact that such union may have been forged when the slaves arrived in Barbados.

    So you cannot neglect that fact that the ancestors on my mother’s side of the family for example: could have arrived from the Ashanti tribe in Ghana and on my father’s side the Ibo tribe of Nigeria.


  22. @ Dompey
    …talking bout family…
    Do you recognise the fellow on the left in the picture?
    …de one in front of the freight cart wid he ears to de ground…
    …or he is from a different tribe…??!!
    🙂
    …couldn’t resist dat one David !!
    Bushie withdraws the insinuation…. LOL

  23. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Dompey…that is what ancestry.com sorts out, if you came from 5 different tribes in Africa, dna tells you which 5, if it’s combined with another 5 tribes from Europe they are able to give you the percentage using dna.


  24. Saturday ,on the whole was a packed day for everybody. This was the day when the house floors were scrub, and the digging of potatoes and yams from the plantation field for personal consumption took place. The weekly grocery shopping was also done on a Saturday,either at the village grocery shop or at one of the bigger merchants in Bridgetown, like C.C King and RDM Maxwell. Roebuck Street was popular with the country folk,as all country buses passed through Roebuck Street, on there way out of and into the City. There were a few supermarkets in Bridgetown,many of which were out of the reach of the ordinary man’s pocket.
    With all of this work going on on Saturdays, there was very little time for the traditional cooked meal, and quite popular was Cou-Cou with salt fish, or tinned fish such as Pilchard ,Macarel and Red Herring,or occasionally stewed potatoes. Anything more that this and you had to turn to the ever present Black Pudding and souse seller, who operated mainly from one of the village shops.
    Saturday evening was time for visiting the Friendly Society or Lodges as they were commonly called. These were the forerunners of the Credit Union, but on much smaller scale. The Golden Egg Lodge in Chimborazzo, was quite popular with residents in the parish, as well as the Sweet Jessamie Lodge in Cane Garden St Andrew, which was managed by the larger than life Dottin Family.
    Saturday night in the country, was marginal livelier than on weekdays, mainly because the village shops were allowed to remain open for business until 10 pm, instead of the usual closing time of 7.30 pm,and the last bus from the City was 11 pm , as against 7.30 pm during the week.
    Electricity came to the villages , in the mid 50’s ,although it ran closeby from plantation to plantation,since probably 1911. Street lights followed some years later. The village shops used some bright gas lamps, which made them the center of attraction in the community. But around 1956/1957 an added attraction came to the country, in the form of a Wurtlitzer juke box which was located at Marjorie Downes shop at Mayers Corner. Some Friday or Saturday nights the Juke box would cease to play due to the overload of coins in it . For four tunes ‘punched’ ,the cost was 25 cents. Around this same time a lady from the City relocated to the village, and was offering her services for 25 Cents a punch. Naturally she was nicknamed ‘Juke Box.”


  25. I am fascinated by the photography which recalls my boy days in the city where my Dad carried on his business.Its proximity to the waterfront afforded me an unforgettable on hands experience.The wharf was a very busy place.The photograph with the cars and ‘Poor’ Bob Parravacino was at the old baggage warehouse.The vessel at anchor in Carlisle Bay might have been of the Harrison Line which vessels called regularly at Barbados and many were crewed by bajans.Grenadians,Vincentians,St Lucians,Dominicans,Trinidadians and Guyanese came to Barbados and obtained employment on these Harrison Line ‘boats’.
    In the other photo,the artisan’s workmanship is first class.Shingled roof,plumb demerara shutters,jalousie windows along with internal sash windows to let in light during the day,and let in air during the night.Even the light pole is plumb upright.The home owner,who might be the old lady drinking the coconut water,has her window open for business and seem to vend the Advocate newspaper and maybe some homemade bread or condiments.These works of art created by artisans of old now cost an arm and a leg because the rotten rich have come to love the native workmanship and is now beyond the purse of the local home owner.
    @Buggy.like you I have a familial connection to a Hall near you.


  26. Well Well

    I was told by my father many years ago that my maternal grandmother was Chinese and my parental grandfather was an African slave, but yet I carry a European surname. It sounds like a head case for Ancestry.com?


  27. Sorry Well Well, I meant to say my maternal- great-grandmother!

  28. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Dompey November 4, 2015 at 5:02 PM
    “I was told by my father many years ago that my maternal grandmother was Chinese and my parental grandfather was an African slave, but yet I carry a European surname..”

    So what is a “parental grandfather”? Is that a clone of a union between a braying jackass and a dumb mule? That explains a lot about your genetic makeup. For your ‘parental grandfather’ to be an African slave he would have had to have been brought to Barbados or the Caribbean prior to 1807 or born in the “British West Indies” before 1833. Now that would make him way older than your maternal great-grand mother.
    Why don’t stop telling lies about yourself? We are not impressed or amused.

  29. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Ok Dompey.


  30. Miller

    You’re at liberty to doubt my account if you so wish because one way or the other, I could give two fighting hoops.

    Now, the reality is my grandmadda on my father’s side of the family looked haft Chinese-which caused me to wonder as to if she had had the Chinese trait, until I decided one day to ask my father regarding my childhood curiosity. And he said to me in no uncertain terms that his grandmother my great grandmadda was of Chinese descent- which accounted for her monglian features and fair skin.


  31. @ Colonel Buggy

    You have been promising me this book for a long time now. I hope you are including some of those pictures you posted a long time ago of the parish environs. You will make us Josephines proud.

    Like your grand parents, mine are also mixed. On my mothers side her grandmother was white and the ‘pusband’ black. I say pusband because he was a no good. It was her money and land but she died first and he cut my grandfather off with the proverbial shilling for marrying a poor girl from a two room shack. On my fathers side his step-father was white, both were married. In fact, it is this step grandfathers land that we inherited.


  32. @ Colonel Buggy

    The white man in the white hat in the photo with the taxis is “Poor Bob”. You probably met him at Bathsheba without realizing who he was. His bay house was Seaview. His son Nick now owns it. It is across the street from Grandview and “alongside’ Breeze.


  33. Miller
    I am quite sure that you’re cognizant of the fact that just after emancipation between 1833-1834 that the emancipated slave refused to work any longer on the plantation, which led to a vacuum that was filled by the Indian and Chinese indenture servant in 1838.


  34. is it possible you are confusing Chinese with down syndrome


  35. LAWSON
    GO TO THE HEAD OF THE CLASS SIR

  36. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ lawson November 4, 2015 at 8:16 PM

    LOL!!! GP beat me to it. You made laugh until I pissed myself. No need to consult Ancestry.com. Now we know from the mule’s mouth the genetic heritage of Dompey aka Marcus Fenty, QC (Quirky Cretin).


  37. @bajans

    I believe that Nick Parravacino, at one time owned the Spa Plantation. Is that so Vincent?


  38. @

    Read “The Wind Wlso Listens”, and “The Royal Palms Are Dying.”. By Alvin Cummins. Available at the Chattel House Books or Amazon.com.


  39. Lawson

    Good one lawson, but unfortunely, my great grandparents lived well into they 90s, so had you been properly informed about Down syndrome you would have known that those persons with this genetic disorder do not live beyond 60 years of age.

    And by the way Lawson: I am actually employed with this population, so it is best to inform you that Down Syndrome can occure in any family because the merely risk of have a child beyond 35 years of age can contributed to this genetic disorder.

    But this genetic disorder is more common in the white population here in the United States, than the black population which probably accounts for one percent of this genetic disorders Lawson. lol


  40. @ lawson

    I noticed that whenever we have a discussion involving race, Georgie Porgie, Lawson and Moneybrain, tries unsuccessfully of course, to defend the inhumanity perpetrated by the white race of men upon the minority people of the world.


  41. For once can we keep the conversation light on this topic and stay away from race?


  42. @Colonel Buggy November 4, 2015 at 11:03 PM #

    I think Freddie Miller at one stage owned or had an interest in the Spa Pltn,will have to check re Nick.


  43. @David,
    Why??


  44. @Colonel Buggy
    Can you tell us about church going in St Joseph/Andrew when you grew up. There was the established Anglican Church and churches like the Plymouth Brethren assemblies at Airy Hill, Melvin’s Hill, St Elizabeth Village and Belleplaine.

    How did the various classes get to church? What about the seating? White/coloured clergy? English/local clergy? Attire of the worshippers
    What about the experience of singing in the church choirs in the established Anglican Church? What about funerals and weddings and the local response to death and dying.
    How does any of these compare with contemporary days?


  45. In the land of the blind the one eyed man is king…so I guess I can agree with your career path dompey . But in Darwins origin of the species, he having a child with down syndrome himself is totally against breeding close ( first cousins etc) so isn’t it a good thing that the plantation owner was active licit or not , would you not agree if the races kept apart that rather than Barbados it would be called the island of doctor moreau


  46. Lawson

    I guess in the land of the blind the one eye man is King; not if he cognitively insuffient like you brother.

    In guess in the land of academics the most gifted man in the world scientisfically ,can’t even clean his behind tah save his life, so what does that say about the one eye man in the land of the blind Lawson?


  47. It says to me give hawking a wide berth


  48. @Colonel Buggy
    how was Guy Fawlkes Day celebratd in the country in your day


  49. @ GP……..conkies


  50. I always liked that saying…the only man entered parliament with good intentions was guy fawkes

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