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Introduction

Elton ‘Elombe’ Mottley

As we celebrated our 50th Anniversary, the question came to my mind about where will we be in the next 50 years? Even tho I ask myself this question, I am not expecting that my imagination can provide you with concrete images of what that culture will be. I don’t intend to even try, but what I would like to do is offer you a framework of ideas to consider.

Barbados is an island of 166 square miles sitting in the middle of a sea with our nearest neighbour 100 miles away. We are not on the beaten path. Any one coming to Barbados has to have a purpose. Can we create a purpose or several purposes to make it worth the while for people from wherever to step off that beaten path and fly or sail to Barbados? When they do, how can we persuade them to pay us for that privilege? What do we as Bajans have that has the power to make Barbados such a desirable destination?

Let us look at what we have that we think are unique:

  • Our beaches. Not at all unique. Everybody got beaches. But if they come our beaches are a bonus not a reason.
  • Our weather. Not unique either. Everybody got weather. But if they come our weather is a bonus not a reason.
  • Our environment. Not unique either. Everybody got environment, some with rivers, trees, pristine agricultural lands, golf courses. But if they come our pristine environment is a bonus not a reason.
  • Our people. Not unique either. Everybody got people. But if they come we must be the reason not a bonus.

What do we have that would create the reason and desire for visitors to step off the beaten track?

There was a time when cricket attracted the world because of the quality of our cricketers. In 1966, we had 10 players in the West Indies Test Team. We played cricket between houses, on raw ground, and on hillsides where the umpire had to tell the batsman that the bowler was coming up. The game has changed but have we changed? Partially. Franklyn Stevenson is showing one way it is done with his cricket school.

In order to survive as an independent country, we must sell the world

  • The pleasure of knowledge, health, caring, happiness and blissfulness by creating a desire for non Bajans to want to remain or go and come back again, and again. We will rent them that time to be with us. That rental is a combination of accommodation, food, transportation, entertainment and service. We must be the landlords.
  • Barbados as the center of education and health across the internet to the world – websites mastering social media as businesses to sell Barbados as the center of Education. ( e.g. Airbnb)

Barbados must develop the reputation across the Caribbean as having the best education and health systems in the Caribbean. If it isn’t so, let us make it so. Our goal is to market Barbados as BARBADOSThe CENTER for EDUCATION in the Americas.

EDUCATION INDUSTRY

BARBADOS – The CENTER for EDUCATION

UNIVERITIES

Our goal should be to have 10-15 Universities based in Barbados by 2025. A major part of this number should be Medical, Law, and Religious Universities.

MEDICAL SCHOOLS

  • When the new hospital is built, it will continue to have a relationship with UWI – Cave Hill.
  • The Old (60 year) Queen Elizabeth Hospital should be leased to one of the Medical Schools to be refurbished and used as a teaching hospital and school.
  • The Old General Hospital on Jemmott’s Lane should also be leased to another Medical School.
  • St Joseph Hospital in St Peter should also be leased to another Medical School.
  • The Psychiatric Hospital (Jenkins, Black Rock) occupies 25 acres and can also be leased to a Medical School. Modern Psychiatric centres should be established for psychiatric patients across the island. Alternately, this facility because of its location could be used as the location for the new National General Hospital with enough space to expand the UWI Medical School (Including nursing). UWI would most likely to get accreditation, a very important status for Caribbean Medical Schools – technicians, veterinary medicine, pharmaceutics, medical sciences, etc.

RELIGIOUS COLLEGES

  • Codrington College (600+ acres) should be developed into the Barbados International Spiritual University. It has already expanded as a University of Christian Thought by training members of other Christian churches.
  • Inviting the Chinese to establish and build a Confucius Institute to teach Chinese religions and philosophical thought and language.(Already being built at UWI- Cave Hill Campus.)
  • Inviting the Japanese/South Korea similarly establish a Buddhist, Zen, South Asian Religious College.
  • Inviting Saudis and Iranians to build Islamic Colleges.
  • Invite the International Jewish community to build a Centre for Jewish Studies especially recognizing the first Jewish Synagogue in the Americas in Bridgetown.
  • Inviting India to construct a Hindu College as well as other Indian religions.
  • Invite Nigeria and other African States to build an African Religions Centre to study African traditional religions and religious thought.

BARBADOS UNIVERSITY

1. COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Extended training in the Fine Arts –

o Animation

o Art

o Design

o Music

o Dance

o Theatre

o Film Production

o Fashion

o Web design

o Critical analysis

· Accounting

· Management

· Project Management

· Other traditional areas

SAMUEL JACKMAN PRESCOD POLYTECHNIC

  • Extended training of Craftsmen in joinery and reproduction of Bajan furniture for export.
  • All students in wood-working stream would be required to individually or as teams reproduce a piece of traditional furniture, or sets in order to graduate.
  • Training of wide range of technical graduates in maintenance and construction.
  • Medical technologists and maintenance of highly sophisticated technologies.

ERDISTON TEACHERS COLLEGE

  • Training is use of new technologies
  • Training how to use of proverbs to establish values

PRIVATE HIGH SCHOOLS FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

Barbados has had a number of private secondary schools for over 70 years viz.

The Barbados Academy, The Modern High School, The Federal High School, Mapp’s High School, St Winnifred’s High School, St Cyprian’s, (Green) Lynch’s Secondary, St Ursula’s Secondary, The Co-operative High School, Seventh Day Adventist High School, Callender’s High School, Metropolitan High School, Christ Church High School, and Codrington High School.

  • Barbados should encourage the use of many of the old plantation estates to establish private accredited high schools with or without boarding for local and foreign students to pursue the International Baccalaureate (IB) program.
  • Provide access to foreign students thru accredited schools, especially South and Central American students to access our High Schools so as to be immersed in English while boarding at former South Coast hotels converted into hostels.

SPORTS AND LIFE STYLE INSTITUTES

  • Education opportunities – coaching in sports, health farms, health spas and related rehabilitation services to develop talents of Bajans
  • Develop support services such as volunteers for the development of Sports in Primary, Secondary and National meetings.
  • UWI and its Institutes must conduct research aimed at encouraging new businesses that can be developed on the internet, in marketing of our music, artistic and cultural industries outlining the types of jobs and services required and existing Worldwide. This would include festivals that could hire our artistes to perform as professionals during the summer and fall. We need to capitalize on the Rhianna Effect.
  • Barbadians should also be encouraged to develop and practice the art of Sticklicking and Road Tennis.

HERITAGE

HERITAGE AND GENERAL NATIONAL EDUCATION

  • To strengthen the moral authority and respect for people, Barbadian students should be taught proverbs as training tools from preschool to the end of their secondary schooling.
  • NIFCA – the platform for exposing our youth to the arts, should emphasize its developmental role by establishing competition first at all primary schools where other students, teachers, family and friends could see their children’s works.
  • The winners in each category will go to the Parish level where they compete again and the winners next to the National Level. This process would also allow parents and friends to once again follow the children’s work and successes at all levels.
  • The finals would consist of those winners from the Parish level.
  • Parents and teachers would be encouraged to be judges alongside National judges who in their deliberations would raise the knowledge base of the parents, friends and the community at large thru the discussions.
  • The establishment of a series of voluntary National Orchestras and choirs to perform in public regularly at the National Bandstands – The Hastings Rocks, The Bay Street Esplanade, Queen’s Park, George V Park, Speightstown Esplanade and other areas. The purpose is to re-develop a solid heritage of musicians to enhance the quality of life in Barbados. We did it all before with Church Choirs and Village Choirs.

LANDSHIP

One of the critical requirements for Bajans is the need to strengthen our own self-awareness and self-esteem of what and who is a Bajan. The Barbados Landship Movement is unique to Barbados and gives us the singular identity second to none. The survival of the Landship Movement must be part of our National Identity. Without it we have a face without a nose.

The only country that has a Landship Movement is Barbados. Landship for adults will die out because most of the communal conditions e.g. savings and burial benefits have been replaced by National Insurance and individual insurance. This unique Bajan indigenous institution should not be allowed to die. It must be recreated and reimaged as an organization in Primary Schools to inculcate several traditional values from the Original Landship plus. We had no qualms of introducing Boy Schools, Girl Guides, Church Lad Brigades, Mother Unions and Cadet Corps because it was mandated by the British Government. All of these organizations required discipline, cooperation, and development of leadership skills

The Landship Movement should be converted into a youth movement like the Boy Scouts or Girl Guides or cadets to maintain this unique aspect of Bajan Culture. These youth Landships would become crucibles of this traditional dance and its musical heritage. Competitions with each other in a series of categories will be organized annually.

The former Barbados National Bank, now Republic Bank, had developed a business program for students that can be incorporated into this Landship Movement. This program can be used to teach money management and savings culture.

CARTS CULTURE

Over the years, Bajans developed a series of carts to move goods and provide services to each other. When compared with Caribbean Islands, the Bajan carts are unique in their design and use. Some of these carts should be adapted and used to provide modern day services while maintaining and projecting our unique heritage. These carts can be decorated and painted to capture individuality of the vendor.

  • Donkey Cart taxis to move visitors from Cruise Ships to Bridgetown and around Resort Areas like St Lawrence Gap, Holetown and Speightstown
  • Bread Carts can be converted to serve hot or cold foods at temporary roadside locations.
  • Rumshops recreated as restaurants serving indigenous food as cuisine with appropriate training available.
  • Snowball Carts selling Bajan ices with locally made fruit juices – Bajan Cherry, Bajan shaddock, Sugar apple, Golden Apple, Packaged Sucking Cane (made from earlier soft varieties), Sea Grape, Guava, Gooseberries, et al
  • Luncheon Carts for food
  • Coconut Carts

MASTER CRAFTSMEN OF BARBADOS

Furniture

There is no doubt that furniture craftsmen/joiners of the past have produced a fantastic array of unique designs. Let us imbue that furniture with the prestige that it deserves`. The palaces/warehouses that some of this furniture is located are

  • Government House, St Michael
  • Ilaro Court, St Michael
  • The Barbados Museum, St Michael
  • Grantley Adams House –Tyrol Cot, Spooners Hill, St Michael
  • The Barbados National Trust Headquarters – Wildey Great House, St Michael
  • Keith Melville’s Sunbury Plantation House, St Phillip

There are many other collections across Barbados that can be used to earn income for the owners as well as for the country.

Training of persons to produce reproductions should follow the same path as training artistes for all types of endeavours – art, music, dance, writing, programing, etc. All Wood Working graduates should be required to reproduce a piece of this furniture in order to graduate. Do it once, do it again! On visits to these locations there are signs indicating cost of item plus shipping costs to rest of the world. Exactly what fine artists do. All art work would be signed and certified as authentic reproductions by a special Reproductions Standard Institute. Marketing will be thru Internet web sites using National ID Codes.

Why are there no tours of Government House? Or Ilaro Court?

  • Bajan Furniture galleries where signed reproductions are also marketed and sold with short histories.

· Chattel houses should be used for restaurants, boutiques especially in the growth areas of St Phillip, St John, St Peter and St Lucy.

·

Each area needs to be given prestige thru media and the internet coverage

Computing systems. Knowledge systems. Cognitive. Will still need people contact.

Pottery

Chalky Mount Barbados should be designated as a National Brand as is given to Cropover. This brand should be accessible to all potters operating out of IDC Facilities Island wide. BIDC needs to change its focus to giving full support to developing local entrepreneurs in these areas.

ATTITUDES – Service and Servitude

Actions needed to strengthen our perception of self.

National Heroes

  • A popular edition of book on National Heroes to be sold for $5-10.
  • Comic book versions of National Heroes for primary schools.
  • Cartoon video stories about National heroes.

The Bajan Experience

  • Recreate Rumshops architecturally and spatially not just in the country but in the city extended to the street. Baxter’s Rd, Nelson St, Roebuck St, Palmetto St
  • Use of Donkey cart taxis to move tourists from harbour to the Inner Bridgetown Mall (Swan St, Broad Street, Trafalgar Square, Palmetto St.)
  • Street food using traditional bread carts to serve from
  • Chattel house as hotels etc.

The Rastafarians of Temple Yard

  • Rastas have been around for the last 40 years, manufacturing products, many inbreeding designs, use of hard leather limiting their market primarily to fellow Rastas.
  • Need to develop wider designs especially to reach the visitor and middle class market.
  • Need access to better quality leathers and other products like the high quality leathers made from the Barbados Black Belly sheep skins.

Barbados Black Belly Sheep

The Barbados Black Belly Sheep is a unique animal that evolved in Barbados over time. Studies have shown that the mutton obtained from the Black Belly Sheep produces high quality Triple B (Barbados Black Belly) lamb for both the local and visitors’ market. It also produces some of the finest leather from its skins.

To support the Black Belly development program, unused agricultural lands must be converted into grass pastures and/or growing miamossi plants, also known as river tamarind (Leucaena leucocephala).

This plant exists in Barbados and has a high protein content suitable for feeding ruminants when it is still green. It was introduced by the Ministry of Agriculture in the Pine but has been allowed to grow wild to maturity scattering its seeds across neighbouring fields. Penalties must be implemented against land owners who allow their lands to become infested by those responsible for administering environmental standards.

This plant if managed correctly, will be an important feed ingredient for the Barbados Black Belly sheep. It is from these animals that we can produce –

  • Leather for leather workers (Consultant – Dr Leroy McClean) – bags, shoes, amulets, hair products, books marks, wrist bands, earrings, jackets, head bands,, etc
  • Food (Consultant – Rosemary Parkinson)
  • Reduce foreign exchange spent on importing animal feeds.

Industrial Development Corporation Services

The Industrial Development Corporation must be restructured to invest in the development of future Bajan entrepreneurs by bringing them together in one location at vastly reduced rent to allow them to feed off of each other. IDC is a landlord of buildings at the industrial Estate outside the Bridgetown Harbour. These buildings are deteriorating and are not being maintained. Certainly IDC could offer discounted rates to bring young entrepreneurs together to feed off of each other to supply services to the outside world.

  • Legal Drafting for countries, states and municipalities worldwide
  • Computer software development
  • Video and sound studios
  • Graphic artists
  • Heritage joiners
  • Clothing Designers and manufacturing
  • Animation

Bridgetown Port Duty Free Facilities

Access to duty free facilities at the port should be two-fold:

  • Wholesalers who sell to retailers.
  • Retailers who sell to visitors.

This will allow retailers to use traditional concepts of hawkers to sell products in various combinations. This tradition of bargaining and combining products allows them to determine their own profits but more importantly share in the spoils of the hospitality industry. These newly defined hawkers at the port will be costumed having acquired training at the Barbados Community College (BCC) and Barbados Institute of Management and Productivity (BIMAP).

Other Developments

  • Dr Carmichael – Restoration of Facades on Roebuck St, Swan St, Bay St etc
  • Paul Altman – Enhancement of Jewish Synagogue, oldest in the New World of the Americas.
  • Tyrol Cot Chattel House Village should be a functional village redesigned as a mini tenantry village with a bakery providing freshly baked traditional breads, rumshop, chickens, palings, bread carts, snowball carts, coconut carts, troubadours, et al.
  • Villagers should wear period costumes.

This is about US. This is about Jobs. This is about Pride. This is about Survival.

Baba Elombe Mottley
January 1, 2017.

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969 responses to “The Next FIFTY YEARS of PRIDE and INDUSTRY!”

  1. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    …..While the gang members lived in luxurious homes, bought high-performance cars and enjoyed holidays to Barbados and cosmetic surgery, their slaves were kept in squalid caravans or kennels, with little access to heating, water and toilets. Some were forced to squat in woods behind their living areas, while electricity was “dangerously” tapped from a nearby pylon…..

    and of course where else would these evil british criminals and enslavers turn up to enjoy their criminal proceeds earned off the backs of their poor unfortunate victims back in UK….you guessed it….the slave society Barbados of course.

    i can just imagine how these skunks acted when posing as wealthy tourists and not the vicious criminals they are…am surprised they did not buy a plantation on the island to complete their crimes and fraud.

  2. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    these are the ugly forms modern day slavery takes….the minority frauds in Barbados qualify for quality prison time in at least 3 of them….

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/rooney-family-slavery-ring-lincolnshire-jailed-prison-sentence-79-years-police-captives-eleven-a7942846.html

    …..Police said modern slavery could take many forms, including sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, fraudulent activity or criminal exploitation and have issued guidance to help spot victims….


  3. … and then there is Samuel Jackman Prescod, born to a free woman of colour in 1806

    He could well have been at HC in 1816 during the slave unrest.

    … and where did London Bourne send his sons, George Rowley and Nathaniel to school?

    .. and the first black Parson in the Church of England, Edward Cragg Haynes, born 1821 in Barbados.

    Point is, HC was opened as a Free School, a Quaker initiative and all colours attended from the word go.

    Free meant Free Negroes, Free Mulattoes and White.

    There were many free negroes and free mulattoes in Barbados from the 1650’s onwards.

    I can’t understand how our historians could have missed as simple and straightforward a fact as this.

  4. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    More importantly Demon John…it’s time for the government to free up all the land to the majority population…..

    …..that decades old scam the minority parasites have of persuading the black governments through bribery and corruption keep land ownership out of the hands of the majority population….has to end.


  5. Hmmm….. Govt the owner of the most land in Bim

    St.Andrew 70 odd % owner occupied land,highest in Bim(rest belongs to govt).

    The Coloured Ward family largest family owned lands in Bim…….

    I wonder who benefits from the spreading of disinformation by this 5th columnist,who has not a clue about Bim.

  6. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    I know well enough about Barbados…enough to know that the land needs to be released by government, to the majority population….all of them should have a plot of land to grow food ..wide enough to build a house…each black family..

    what colored what…am sure the Wards are mostly deceased and most of the land already sold to foreign interests..

    All these disgusting looking little box houses government raided the treasury to get Maloney or some other crook to build, with no room for even a kitchen garden are a disgrace when one is driving on the highway.


  7. Chuckle…..I will let the Ward family know that they are dead…..what an ignoramus….hahaha.


  8. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 12, 2017 at 4:30 PM #
    I know well enough about Barbados…enough to know that the land needs to be released by government, to the majority population….all of them should have a plot of land to grow food ..wide enough to build a house…each black family..
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    There is Springhall in St. Lucy, government owned and leased to small farmers.

    Pretty sure there was a “land for the landless” programme not long ago.

    http://www.agriculture.gov.bb/agri/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=294%3Aland-for-the-landless&Itemid=101

    Seem to remember a whole set of work in the Sedge Pond Bawden area back in the days when I hiked all about Barbados with the BNT hikes.

    But I am not sure if it came to anything.

    Seem to remember it reverted to bush but perhaps it is back up and running.

    You should go on a walk about in Barbados and find out about your country.

    The fact is that many Bajans now have sensitive skins and can stand the bush and the itching.

    No point giving many of them land to farm!!


  9. What I would do is to Government to make a labour pool available to farmers from which can be rented as many people as required to do a job.

    There are Bajans who enjoy working in the outdoors and doing hard manual work.

    Air conditioning and skin creams are just not their cup of tea.

    That way we avoid the whining about slavery.

  10. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    John…….if the land was distributed sufficiently. ..land ownership…not lease….to the majority population , the government would not have so much land sitting around 11 parishes, just idle and growing cow itch and bush…and breeding mosquitoes.

    What land for the landless what…land ownership for everyone is a much better phrase.

  11. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    “What I would do is to Government to make a labour pool available to farmers from which can be rented as many people as required to do a job.”

    That labor pool would be better coming from the minority population, they should enjoy working outdoors even better, they need the vitamin D……yall asses are too lazy and need hard, manual labor.

    Government can’t force the majority population to do anything, slavery is so over.


  12. … but it can create jobs!!


  13. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger September 12, 2017 at 1:25 PM #
    Reeves did not attend HC high school, he had private school education, it would have been mentioned if he had…
    +++++++++++++++++++++

    Do you realise that HC was probably private back then?

    I’ll let you into another secret.

    The Reeves Family in St. James … Quaker as well.

    Gabriel Reeves married the Widow of Benjamin Todd Jones, Mary Mehitabel in 1793.

    I know Benjamin Todd Jones is Quaker because he is buried in the Quaker Burying Ground in St. Philip, 1792.

    He and I also share a common ancestor!!

    Quaker married Quaker!!

    Good chance Conrad Reeves was a shoo in for HC!!


  14. WW&C
    You are correct about the sale of some of the lands held by the Wards.
    BU has a number of articles, but here is a link…

    https://antiguaobserver.com/ccj-hands-down-ruling-in-case-before-barbados-courts-since-1988/

    Seems as if Bjerkham got 125 acres for $1.5M, Looked as if he won, but the negative publicity make him walk away. Personally, I think they outmaneuvered the Australian.

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/74624/farm-twist

    BTW: That’s 12, 000 an acre. The land could have subdivided into 1 acre lots and sold to aspiring Barbadian farmers.

  15. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    So after saying HC high school was free 3 times…now it was not free anymore, it was private.

    I hope ya got home help.

  16. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Bjerkham is vile, he did that to spite the australian dude.

    Bjerkham should be in prison..I dont why the government put him in the people’s central bank, you know it’s something corrupt, no good to the people and involves bribery.

    Gazer…the majority population should have mandatory land ownership, the government has no reason to free up one acre of land to each family…all that land is just sitting there growing bush, doing nothing and breeding diseased mosquitoes.


  17. Religious study is still taught at HC.


  18. So what can we say about Samuel Jackman Prescod, our National Hero.

    Well, here he is in a painting of the first Anti Slavery Convention in1840 in England.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_Anti-Slavery_Society_Convention,_1840_by_Benjamin_Robert_Haydon.jpg

    Go down the list and google the names.

    Many are …. well … Quakers!!

    You are looking at Samuel Jackman Prescod sitting in a group of Quakers!!

    So it is legitimate to ask “what was SJP’s link to Quakerism?”

    By now you know there has to be a link but I will keep you in suspense!!


  19. You see a “frail and elderly” Thomas Clarkson addressing the meeting in the painting.

    Now, Thomas Clarkson wrote a book in 1807, the year after the birth of SJP.

    “A Portraiture of Quakers” is the title.

    The introduction begins …. “From the year 1787, when I began to devote my labours to the abolition of the Slave Trade, I was thrown frequently into the company of people called Quakers. These people had then been long unanimous upon the subject. Indeed, they had placed it among the articles of their religious discipline.”

    It deals with ” …. the Moral Education, Discipline, Peculiar Customs, Religious Principles, Political and Civil Economy and Character of The Society of Friends”.

    He was not a Quaker but got drawn into the fight for the abolition of the Slave Trade through them … as did Wilberforce and tried to document what he saw!!

    You can download it from the web and it is searchable!!

    Worth looking at.


  20. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 12, 2017 at 5:57 PM #
    So after saying HC high school was free 3 times…now it was not free anymore, it was private.
    I hope ya got home help.
    ++++++++++++++++++

    Heavenly Father, grant me patience and tolerance!!


  21. David September 12, 2017 at 6:39 PM #
    Religious study is still taught at HC.
    ++++++++++++++++++

    Well well !!

    Must have started it back.


  22. Free has nothing to do with fees.


  23. These people had then been long unanimous upon the subject. Indeed, they had placed it among the articles of their religious discipline
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    So … if Quakers were thinking this way and Barbadian Planters were Quakers our Historians have been out to lunch!!!!!!


  24. I would not had investigated these matters if John was not making up history. The illnesses of Barbados are well known and documented..,,

    http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ROHO/wgmn_papers/mary_chamberlain_paper.pdf


  25. Gazer

    I wonder what she would say if she realized that this same racist lot were responsible for the abolition of slavery!!

  26. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @TheGazer
    Thanks for the Imogen Walmsley and Mary Chamberlain research papers. It’s interesting that the more you prove John wrong the more fantastical and illogical his lies become.


  27. Those crooked Rooney most likely stayed at the racist Walcott of harbour lights notoriety.He is now trying to palm off some condos compliments of Altman et al.Walcott the racist demagogue allowed to exist in a country with a black majority people in this 21st century.


  28. Before I reach Samuel Jackman Prescod let me speak to Quakers Road and Carrington Village raised by Hal Austin.

    Professor Woodvile Marshall posits in his recently published work on the place names of Barbados as follows for Carrington Village.

    “George Carrington, owner of Carrington Plantation in St. Philip, purchased the 82 acre Welches Plantation in 1872 but it is likely that the tennantry was already expanding …”

    On Quakers Road he says” residential district, is located in Carrington Village.”

    “The name which can be found in the list of polling districts, no doubt originates from its proximity to the property that the Quakers owned at Pilgrim, specifically the burial ground”.

    Pilgrim is Government House. “… official residence of the Governor/Governor General since 1703 …. The present official residence was formerly the Great House that was owned by the Quaker, Thomas Pilgrim. After a lasing arrangement which lasted thirty-three years, Government in 1736 eventually bought the house, together with 18 acres around it.”


  29. Both the Pilgrim and Carrington families were early Quakers.

    There is a burial record of a Dr. Robert Pilgrim in 1764 a direct descendant of Thomas Pilgrim who owned Bushy Park Plantation asking to be buried with his brother and sister in the family vault in the Quaker’s Yard.

    https://monumentalarchiveproject.wordpress.com/2017/02/22/colour-of-commemoration/

    If you go across the road to St. Philip’s Parish Church you will find the grave of Henningham Codrington Carrington!!

    Two Quaker families. Codrington and Carrington.

    https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=113606337


  30. Gazer

    Both papers confirm just how financially tenuous sugar has been and the consequences.

    You see it today with the subsidies Government has to find to support it even at an output level a fraction of the past.

    What you should do is to figure out who provided the subsidies in former times before Government took it on.

    We have a choice, we can concentrate on the misery or look at the fact that the sacrifice resulted in the abolition of slavery worldwide.

    I prefer the latter because it gets us back to the core values that allowed us to survive.

    … plus, it makes every square inch of Barbados a World Heritage Site.


  31. Let us look at what we have that we think are unique:
    Our beaches. Not at all unique. Everybody got beaches. But if they come our beaches are a bonus not a reason.
    Our weather. Not unique either. Everybody got weather. But if they come our weather is a bonus not a reason.
    Our environment. Not unique either. Everybody got environment, some with rivers, trees, pristine agricultural lands, golf courses. But if they come our pristine environment is a bonus not a reason.
    Our people. Not unique either. Everybody got people. But if they come we must be the reason not a bonus.
    What do we have that would create the reason and desire for visitors to step off the beaten track?
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++

    10 to 12 million souls were brought from Africa in the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade.

    Another 10 to 12 million were walked across the Sahara in chains

    Both crimes against humanity.

    What makes Barbados unique?

    Every square inch makes us unique for it is right here that some remarkable and inspired people drew a line in the sand and said this must end.

    We are the descendants of those people.

    Their efforts affected the entire world and continues to do so to this day.

    So I say, Glorify God, cling to the core values that made this remarkable change in world history possible.

    Do not look back in misery, look forward in hope.

  32. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    John is now desperate and showing how pathetic he and the minorities are in trying to continue and maintain a slave society in Barbados…..

    …… what is very important is the job of continuing to expose the slaves of parliament, every minister, every politician who is hellbent on taking bribes and bathing themselves in corruption to continue to manage the slave society for financial gain…they have to be continually exposed for the whole world to view their evil black faces, see the criminality of enablers of modern day slavery shining in their faces.

    Black governments should not have to wait for the UK to define modern day slavery for them or arrest those criminals in the UK who practice it before the slaves of parliament in Barbados recognize and act against these crimes against the people and eradicate modern day slavery from the Barbados society…..it’s THEIR ancestors were the victims of the horrors and brutality of centuries if traditional slavery at the hands of the savages from UK…

    …their instincts alone should have told these bribetaking black jackasses of parliament that modern day slavery is a crime that should never been allowed to flourish post slavery and post independence on the island for 40 years, allowing it to do so is blatant disrespect to the memories of their own ancestors.

    ….these clown slaves of parliament boast of being highly educated and holders of degrees, most of them are LAWYERS and yet it never entered their minds that what they allow the minorities on the island, the few whites, indians, syrians, lebanese etc to do to the majority black population and have for decades….IS MODERN DAY SLAVERY..

    The definition of modern day slavery….

    “Police said modern slavery could take many forms, including sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, fraudulent activity or criminal exploitation and have issued guidance to help spot victims….”

    Even more importantly the whole minority business community made up of local and foreign minorities, which includes but is not limited to Cow and Bizzy Williams, Bjorn Bjerkham, Philip Tempro, Mark Maloney……..most of the indian and syrian community….all see themselves as slave owners and massas on the island and the majority Black population as their slaves…..and have fir decades.

    All of these racists are modern day enslavers, committed the crimes over and over to fit the definition for many decades…and are enabled and protected by the black government ministers and black politiciand in enriching themselves off modern day slavery.

    Just like their enablers, both Black governments, these self proclaimed modern day slave masters need to see their faces splashed around the globe for the whole world to see the criminals that they are and the crimes they commit against the majority Black population.

    Gabriel…the Walcotts of harbor lights/fights shame are some disgusting racists and should not be still operating a racist nightclub in Barbados…these are the crimes need exposing and their business shutting down and never patronized by the majority population.

    One way or another a movement must be formed to chase these racists and their racism, the modern day enslavers and their Black government enablers and supporters, completely out of existence, out of the society.

    Am sure the resident demons thought I was joking yesterday when I said they will howl on their deathbeds in disappointment.

  33. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    For the buckingham palace pimps, both black and who think they are white ……whether ya like it or not,..

    …..not that it is important to me, but I know that there exists modern day slaves who care.

    “England may be one meeting away, from having its first BLACK princess.


  34. John,
    Carrington Village, as we now know it, is really two different districts. The South, bordering Belleville, is different to the north, along the train line, which was part of Welches terrace, as I understand it. When did they merge to become one district? Licorish Village is a totally separate entity.
    How about the Belle, Mount and Neil’s plantations? I know the Belle was owned by the Harewood family of Scotland, extended family of the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, as I understand it.

  35. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    ….and talking about pathetic negros………


  36. Black Royalties

    Queen Charlotte 1814-19

  37. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Exactly. ..as beautifil as the young lady is, she is not the first Black Royal lineage, definitely wont be the last….

    Black Royalty has been around for more thousands of years than we can count.

  38. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Where are BUs two resident Demons this morning.

    They awfully quiet…rough night, the sun must have risen and caught them outside.


  39. Lest we forget!!!!!!!

    BARBADOS UNIVERSITY

    COMMUNITY COLLEGE

    Extended training in the Fine Arts –

    o Animation

    o Art

    o Design

    o Music

    o Dance

    o Theatre

    o Film Production

    o Fashion

    o Web design

    o Critical analysis

    · Accounting

    · Management

    · Project Management

    · Other traditional areas

    SAMUEL JACKMAN PRESCOD POLYTECHNIC

    Extended training of Craftsmen in joinery and reproduction of Bajan furniture for export.
    All students in wood-working stream would be required to individually or as teams reproduce a piece of traditional furniture, or sets in order to graduate.
    Training of wide range of technical graduates in maintenance and construction.
    Medical technologists and maintenance of highly sophisticated technologies.
    ERDISTON TEACHERS COLLEGE

    Training is use of new technologies
    Training how to use of proverbs to establish values
    PRIVATE HIGH SCHOOLS FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

    Barbados has had a number of private secondary schools for over 70 years viz.

    The Barbados Academy, The Modern High School, The Federal High School, Mapp’s High School, St Winnifred’s High School, St Cyprian’s, (Green) Lynch’s Secondary, St Ursula’s Secondary, The Co-operative High School, Seventh Day Adventist High School, Callender’s High School, Metropolitan High School, Christ Church High School, and Codrington High School.

    Barbados should encourage the use of many of the old plantation estates to establish private accredited high schools with or without boarding for local and foreign students to pursue the International Baccalaureate (IB) program.
    Provide access to foreign students thru accredited schools, especially South and Central American students to access our High Schools so as to be immersed in English while boarding at former South Coast hotels converted into hostels.
    SPORTS AND LIFE STYLE INSTITUTES

    Education opportunities – coaching in sports, health farms, health spas and related rehabilitation services to develop talents of Bajans
    Develop support services such as volunteers for the development of Sports in Primary, Secondary and National meetings.
    UWI and its Institutes must conduct research aimed at encouraging new businesses that can be developed on the internet, in marketing of our music, artistic and cultural industries outlining the types of jobs and services required and existing Worldwide. This would include festivals that could hire our artistes to perform as professionals during the summer and fall. We need to capitalize on the Rhianna Effect.
    Barbadians should also be encouraged to develop and practice the art of Sticklicking and Road Tennis.
    HERITAGE

    HERITAGE AND GENERAL NATIONAL EDUCATION

    To strengthen the moral authority and respect for people, Barbadian students should be taught proverbs as training tools from preschool to the end of their secondary schooling.
    NIFCA – the platform for exposing our youth to the arts, should emphasize its developmental role by establishing competition first at all primary schools where other students, teachers, family and friends could see their children’s works.
    The winners in each category will go to the Parish level where they compete again and the winners next to the National Level. This process would also allow parents and friends to once again follow the children’s work and successes at all levels.
    The finals would consist of those winners from the Parish level.
    Parents and teachers would be encouraged to be judges alongside National judges who in their deliberations would raise the knowledge base of the parents, friends and the community at large thru the discussions.
    The establishment of a series of voluntary National Orchestras and choirs to perform in public regularly at the National Bandstands – The Hastings Rocks, The Bay Street Esplanade, Queen’s Park, George V Park, Speightstown Esplanade and other areas. The purpose is to re-develop a solid heritage of musicians to enhance the quality of life in Barbados. We did it all before with Church Choirs and Village Choirs.
    LANDSHIP

    One of the critical requirements for Bajans is the need to strengthen our own self-awareness and self-esteem of what and who is a Bajan. The Barbados Landship Movement is unique to Barbados and gives us the singular identity second to none. The survival of the Landship Movement must be part of our National Identity. Without it we have a face without a nose.

    The only country that has a Landship Movement is Barbados. Landship for adults will die out because most of the communal conditions e.g. savings and burial benefits have been replaced by National Insurance and individual insurance. This unique Bajan indigenous institution should not be allowed to die. It must be recreated and reimaged as an organization in Primary Schools to inculcate several traditional values from the Original Landship plus. We had no qualms of introducing Boy Schools, Girl Guides, Church Lad Brigades, Mother Unions and Cadet Corps because it was mandated by the British Government. All of these organizations required discipline, cooperation, and development of leadership skills

    The Landship Movement should be converted into a youth movement like the Boy Scouts or Girl Guides or cadets to maintain this unique aspect of Bajan Culture. These youth Landships would become crucibles of this traditional dance and its musical heritage. Competitions with each other in a series of categories will be organized annually.

    The former Barbados National Bank, now Republic Bank, had developed a business program for students that can be incorporated into this Landship Movement. This program can be used to teach money management and savings culture.

    CARTS CULTURE

    Over the years, Bajans developed a series of carts to move goods and provide services to each other. When compared with Caribbean Islands, the Bajan carts are unique in their design and use. Some of these carts should be adapted and used to provide modern day services while maintaining and projecting our unique heritage. These carts can be decorated and painted to capture individuality of the vendor.

    Donkey Cart taxis to move visitors from Cruise Ships to Bridgetown and around Resort Areas like St Lawrence Gap, Holetown and Speightstown
    Bread Carts can be converted to serve hot or cold foods at temporary roadside locations.
    Rumshops recreated as restaurants serving indigenous food as cuisine with appropriate training available.
    Snowball Carts selling Bajan ices with locally made fruit juices – Bajan Cherry, Bajan shaddock, Sugar apple, Golden Apple, Packaged Sucking Cane (made from earlier soft varieties), Sea Grape, Guava, Gooseberries, et al
    Luncheon Carts for food
    Coconut Carts


  40. The Belle – The Bell – St. Michael
    Caribbean Vol. iv
    Gov. Philip Bell was 8th son of Sir Robert Bell, M.P.

    1641–56 BMHS xxxv 220
    9 conveyances briefly noted below show the making or putting together of the pltn by Gov. Philip Bell. All the lands are in St. Michael. They adjoin each other & other lands of Philip Bell. In one case the land is said to bound on other land of Philip Bell, “taken up by warrant”, this must men or refer to a grant to Bell from the Earl of Carlisle and was probably 200 ac, the usual such grants to men in bell’s position.
    /3/307 50 ac from Henry Rycroft
    /3/310 10 ac from John Ashurst
    /3/311 10 ac from Charles Hilliard
    /1/160 10 ac from Ralph Mountstevens
    /1/587 15 ac from John Richardson
    /3/571 15 ac from John Richardson
    3/571 100 ac from Richard Peers
    3/710 15 ac from Henry Futter
    /7/413 20 ac from William Stretchley
    /5/58 10 ac from Simon Mason
    120 ac added to the nucleus of “land taken up by warrant”, this probably gave Bell a pltn of 440 ac by 1656.

    1659 Will 14/344
    Philip Bell bequeaths pltn to nephew Philip Bell and his male heirs. If no heirs, to nephew Edmund Bell, cousin Thos. Rous, nephew Timothy Thornhill BMHS 35:220 (nephews Philip & Francis)

    1674 /7/514, 516
    Philip Bell & Francis Bell of England, brothers, absentee, sell to Richard Howell a pltn of 427 ac in St. Michael for £10,500 sterling.
    Borders: Sir Paul Paynter (Lower Estate), Philip Symonds, Henry White, Christopher Lyne, Samuel Hathaway, Nicholas Blake, John Bignall, Henry Fuller, Samuel Osborne, others. White servants and slaves. 244 ac in st. Philip now in possession of several tenants.

    1674 Ford, Mab Howell & Guy Richard Howell & Richard Grey were business partners & substantial land owners in St. Michael & elsewhere. Both died in England within a year of each other, without issue.

    1701 Will 41/476
    Richard Howell of London, England Absentee, bequeaths pltn to nephew William Wheeler of Barbados.

    1709 Will 5/285
    William Wheeler, heir of Richard Howell, bequeaths pltn to William Wheeler, the testators nephew, a minor, of England, absentee Samuel Barwick names as executor. Pltn The Bell
    1714 /28/28 Hon Samuel Barwisk sole qualified executor of will of William Wheeler dec’d, mortgages “The Bell” pltn in St. Michael where William Wheeler lived – 477 ac to Conrade Adams of Christ Church for £8440 sterling.
    Bounders: Thomas Neale (Neil’s), Philip Symonds, Sir Robert avers (Lower Estate), John Bignall, Richard Forstall (Waterford), others, a gulley. William Wheeler died in considerable debt and in addition bequeathed substantial legacies charged on the pltn. Samuel Barwick as executor has paid £10,113 currency of his own money to satisfy pressing creditors and for the upkeep of the pltn. He now mortgages “The Bell” and “The Pine” pltns in his capacity as executor to reimburse himself.

    1721 Wheeler
    1721–52 At some time during this period transactions, not discovered among the records, took place which brought both The Bell and The Pine pltns into the ownership of the Barwick family.

    1752 /109/244
    Hon. William Barwick of St. Michael sells to Gedney Clarke of St. Michael The Bell.
    Bounders: Rebecca Simmons widow, Hon. John Frere (Lower Estate), Edward Butcher, Thomas Tuncker (Waterford), Benjamin Mills, Elias Gibbes, James King, Hon. Thomas Harrison dec’d (Neils).

    1780 /150/340
    Chancery Court conveyance. Thomas Workman, one of the Masters-in-Chancery, sells to Daniel Lascelles & William Daling, busness partners of England, the pltn of Gedney Clarke III, called The Belle, in St. Michael. Gedney Clarke I died, 1764, in debt to Daniel Lascelles. In his will Gedney Clarke I named his son, Gedney Clarke II as his heir. In 1770 Gedney Clarke II confirmed his father’s debts to Lascelles and incurred further debts on his own account. These debts, totaling £50,000 were secured by a mortgage, Clarke to Lascelles, on The Belle. In 1774 Hon Gedney Clarke III, Collector of Customs was found short in his accounts as Collector by £16,200 sterling. The Attorney General, William Moore, filed a writ in the Exchequer Court and obtained a mortgage agains the pltns of Gedney Clarke II. The Belle and Henley, in St. John, where Clarke had bought from the SPG.

    1788 CO 28/62 p. 251 346 slaves, 535 acres See BMHS xxxiv 179, xxxvii 413
    In 1776 Lascelles brought a Chancery Court action against Clarke and when Clarke died, in the same year, continued the action against his son and heir, Gedney Clarke III. Lascelles sought a court ruling giving the mortgage precedence over the debt to the crown. The Chancery Court ruled that the debt to the Crown took precedence over all private debts and placed the Lascelles debt as the second lien in order of precedence for payment. There were other debts of some £10,000.
    At a Chancery Court auction in 1780, Daniel Lascelles bought the pltn for £23,000 – 537 ac – 232 slaves
    (No appraised value of land or slaves included in conveyance)
    Bounders: Applewaithe Frere (Lower Estate), Jonathan Worrell (Neil’s), Henry Peter Simmons, James Polgreen, Samuel Welch, Benjamin Alleyne Cox, William Pinder, James King, dec’d, Katherine Tuncker, dec’d (Waterford), Elizabeth Slade, dec’d.

    1784 Will 28/312
    Daniel Lascelles bequeathed pltn to his brother, Edwin Lascelles, Absentee, Henry? BMHS 35:220

    1795 /29/557 Edwin Lascelles bequeathed pltn to his cousin, Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood, Absentee

    1825 Earl of Harewood
    1836 See Colthurst Journal p. 80 statistics on Apprentices
    1872–1907 Lord Harewood (1901 deceased) 549
    1859 Horizontal windmill
    1859 Absentee
    1879 Steam – 16 Hp
    1912–14 Lord Harewood (Little Simmonds added) 584
    Atty. Hon G.D.L. Pile
    1921 Lord Harewood 145 ??
    1929 Lord Harewood 631
    1934–5 Maj. Hon. E.C. Lascelles (Edward) 631
    1937 Trustees of Lascelles 627
    1951 Hon. G.D. Lascelles
    1963 Hon. Gerald Lascelles BMHS 30:111
    1970 Hon. G. Lascelles 481
    1957/8 Hon. G.D. Lascelles (sugar ____)
    BMHS xiv 161
    Entailed by will of 5th Earl, the late (1947) Earl’s father, upon the latter’s 2nd son, Hon. Gerald Vincent Lastelles & his heirs, male.

    Ed. Stoute 84-01-08
    The Clarkes were amongst those who entertained George Washington. Gedney Clarke II is said to have introduced the Mahogany Tree into B’dos after Treaty of Paris in 1763.

    1680 Richard Howell & Guy 605 ac (This includes Pine)

    1654 RB3/2/686
    Samuel Hyatt sells 80 ac St. Michael to Phillip Bell sometime Governor where Hyatt used to live.
    Bounders: Samuel Richardson, David Bix (called Stonnekins) with gully down towards Indian End, John Frost, Robert Balrick, Phillip Bell.

    1917 British Union Oil Map (Archives) 569
    (W.W.A.) (File at Archives with much information)
    1832 14 March
    For sale John T. Bourne (B’dian 14 March 1832)
    1857 For Sale App: 2400 att. From Benjamin Sainthill 18

  41. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    John September 12, 2017 at 5:35 PM #
    … but it can create jobs!!

    It can create jobs for lazy bajan white people too, you demon, then they wont have to import drugs and guns and practice modern day slavery on the island….

    ……it will also employ the other groups of minorities full time..keep them from committing crimes and from paying blacks to commit crimes.

    Five of them got charged for murder today, an indian dude the ringleader and known drug dealer and the 4 black idiots he hired to help him.

    It’s the white, indian, syrian gang leaders ya need working the fields….keep them outta trouble and from hiring black dummmies to help them commit crimes.


  42. The above is taken from the Queree Papers which is work done by Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree, all handwritten.

    Richard Goddard is responsible for organizing its “digitization” through others.

    You will see why Howell’s Cross Road got its name.

    …. and The Ivy, write that name in old English script … looks a lot like Guy!!

    You see the Belle went into Chancery …. unprofitable!!


  43. Howell and Guy were both Quaker.

  44. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Gazer…..these people are in denial…it’s not blacks but whites, indians and syrians etc are the heads of the black gangs on the island, they pay these jobless lame brained boys on the blocks to commit these crimes and run the drugs and guns….it’s those minority heads that need cutting the hell off so the body can heal…

    The practice of racism has evolved over the decades into modern day slavery which has to be stamped out completely, if any positives changes are to come about, until those two curses and blights are removed from the island permanently, it will always be more of the same.


  45. Neil’s – Neal(e)’s, St. George & St. Michael
    1661 3/310 Edward Crofts of St. Michael mortgages to John Sampson of St. Michael for £792 sterling ½ of pltn of 128 ac, St. Michael, 20 slaves
    Bounders: (W) Maj. Philip Bell (The Belle), (S) Christopher Line, Valley? (N & E) Mary Ann Wright, widow (Salters)

    1674 Neale
    1680 Thomas Neale, 50 ac, St. Michael
    1721 Neale
    1740 91/118 Brandow 302, BMHS xxix 18
    In 1737, John Neal mortgages to Hon. Thomas Harrison for £6157, 2 pltns 1) In St. George, 130 ac, 2) In St. Michael, 159 ac
    Bounders: Sarah Stroud, Ann Dennis, Richard Salter (Salters), Rebecca Symmons, widow (Little Simmons, now part of Belle), The Bell pltn, James King, Henry King, Henry Peter King (The Valley), Andrew Dunn, Edward Eldridge, Nathaniel Haggatt (Haggatt Hall), William Turner
    Thomas Harrison now takes over management of pltns and allows John Neal £100 per year for support of self and family and continued dwelling in the mansion house.
    (Neil’s must have become the property of Tohmas Harrison (Eleanor Niele was daughter of Thomas Harrison) as it was later the pltn of his grandson, Jonathan Worrell)

    1797 206/191 Jonathan Worrell named s a bounder on Little Simmons, a small pltn of 41 ac
    1825 (Neel’s) William B. Worrell, 1814 BMHS 29:21 – William Bryant Worrell
    1840 Shilstone xxii 1 (___), BMHS ix 19
    William Bryant Worrell of France had married a French wife. At his death, his pltn was escheated to the Crown because he had bequeathed it to her and she was a foreigner – BMHS xxix 21. John Montefiore bought the pltn from the Court for £10,000 (£12,400 Cy). “Barbian” 1840. Feb 12 – in casual receiver
    BMHS viii 177 1840 Feb 1
    For sale in Escheat, property of marie Ann Catherine Worrell and escheated to crown said Marie being alien 149½

    1842–58 John Montefiore (’42 Montepore) (’48 dec’d) (149 in ’42) 210
    1857 Shilstone xxii 9 (_) Pur.: J.B. Mapp £23,000 213
    Shilstone xxxv – Pur: Brown Map from Mrs. Montifiore
    1854 Death of Montefiore – BMHS 22:

    1859–80 James B. Mapp (210 in ’59–’66) 213
    1881 Chancery Court Gibbs et al v Mapp et al
    RB1/367/773 Ent 1882
    Executors of James Brown Mapp, senior, sell to James Brown Map (Jnr?)
    1887–92 Mapp brothera 213
    1895–6 Chancery Court Mapp v Mapp et al
    1898–1921 A. Gibbs & Son 213
    1901 Wind
    1929 T.A. McKenzie 210
    1934–37 T.E. McKenzie 210
    1951, 57/8 Neils & Rowans Estates Ltd
    1970 Neils & Rowans Estates Ltd


  46. Again … the work of Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree, made possible in this form by Richard Goddard and others.

    Quakers again!!


  47. … again … into Chancery!!


  48. The Mount, Middletons Mount, St. George
    1647 BMHS xxiii 73–7
    Transfers of land between Thomas Middleton, James Drax and William Drax. These transfers of land in St. George designed to consolidate holdings

    1674 Middleton’s Mount
    1680 Benjamin Middleton, 379 ac, St. George [130 slaves – Dunn 114]
    1721 Rawlin
    1735 85/155–158
    In 1699 William Rawlin snr, bought pltn from Benjamin Middleton. Rawlin gave mortgate and a further mortgage of £5000 in 1712. Benjamin Middleton died in 1714 and by his will (37/352) named his wife, Abigail Middleton as his heir. Abigail Middleton then married Francis Latham. On the death of his wife, Francis Latham sued for the debt owed by Rawlin and levied on the pltn slaves. Jonathan Blenman bought the slaves and the pltn assuming the responsibility for all debts charged on the pltn and owed by William Rawlin jnr, the son and heir of William Rawlin, snr

    1768 Will 31/169
    Hon. Jonathan Blenman, Attorney General, bequeaths his 2 pltns 1) The Mount, 2) Kirton’s (Kent), Christ Church, to his son, William Blenman
    (Jonathan Blenman heavily in debt to Lascelles & Maxwell, business partners of London)

    1788 CO28/62 p. 251 – 125 slaves, 292 acres
    1816 Edward Lascelles, Earl of Harewood, £5150 damage
    1825 Earl of Harewood
    1842–87 Lord Harewood 292
    1859 Absentee
    1860 Horizontal windmill
    1892–1929 Earl of Harewood (292 in ’92–’07) 287
    1934 E.C. Lascelles 287
    1935 Maj. the Hon. E.C. Lascelles 287
    1937 Trustees of Lascelles 287
    1947 BMHS xiv 161 – Owned by Lascelles family – entailed by will of 5th Earl, the late Earl’s father, upon the latter’s 2nd son, Hon. General Vincent Lascelles and his heirs male also BMHS xxx iii

    1951 & 57/8 Hon. G.D. Lascelles (Attorney G.D.L. Pile)
    1963 Hon. Gerald Lascelles – BMHS xxx iii
    1970 Hon. G. Lascelles 182

    “THE MOUNT LANDS”, St. George
    RB3/30/21 9/6/1720
    John Cousins of St. George sells for £1300, 50 ac 20 p to Thomas Fox Jnr, of St. Philip
    Bounders: (N) Eward Licorish, Samuell Sedgewich, (E) Richard Roach, dec’d and John Green, (S) Richard Wiltshire, dec’d. (W) Mary Buttall, widow and Peter Walter


  49. Again, the work of Ronnie Hughes made possible in this form by Richard Goddard and others

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