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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. The Middleton family is really an interesting family.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shelter_Island,_New_York

    Check the early history of Shelter Island.

    Quaker owned from 1651 and supplied the means to develop Barbados

    One of Middleton’s partners was Constant Sylvester who gave his name to Constant Plantation.

    Another was Thomas Rous, owner of Halton, whose son John married Margaret Fell, step daughter of George Fox.

    George Fox married her mother, also Margaret Fell.

    The reason Quaker business ventures had a high chance of success was because of the trust and friendship each partner had for the other.

    They were in a fellowship if you like not only among themselves but with other Quakers … who they referred to as friends!!

    … and years later (haven’t done the genealogy but …)

    William Wilberforce, an evangelical Christian was approached by Lady Middleton and asked to be the spokesman in Parliament for the case against the slave trade …..

    …. and today, there is a Middleton who is married to the future king of England!!

    Would be interesting to do the family connections!!


  2. The Mount seems to have avoided Chancery

  3. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    So now we have to ask, what will the police and government do now that they know the heads of the gangs in Barbados are the minorities, yep….same minorities they been allowing to commit crimes on the island for decades.., without consequences. .

    The same minorities they allow to disenfranchise and steal from the majority population.

    The same minorities who are the gang leaders.

    So now what will they do.

    Ya would think Angela and Carson Yardfowls would be on here tearing into the minorities right…useless negros.


  4. So you see, there is a far more believable story to the existence of Barbados.

    It is both humane and human.

    All supportable by facts, completely unvarnished facts, that give rise to the completely unvarnished truth!!


  5. … and, it points the way to a future of hope, not the brutish future which can be the only future of the story promoted by our intelligentsia who are really not as intelligent as they believe!!


  6. John,
    How did Mayers Land, which runs off My Lord’s Hill, get its name? I am also interested in Skeete’s land in the Ivy.


  7. Hello!!!
    This man is sick as shiite…. 🙂
    Surely he has family somewhere that can help him…


  8. The next 50 years of pride and industry is an IMPOSSIBILITY…
    …unless we can heal the sickness that envelopes John
    …and the idiocy that defines Hal.

    We may be able to work with Vincent…

  9. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Lol…


  10. John,
    You have now encouraged me to spend more time in the library at Friends House, the Quakers’ HQ in Euston.
    I once worked at the British Library and did some research at the Public Record Office and the library at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, where it was interesting reading the governors’ reports, but I totally ignored Friends House.
    As a young man I did an extended essay on the socio-economics of the sugar industry in Barbados, but looking at the Quakers would have vastly improved it.


  11. There are a series of names of Roads in that area which I pass and always want to know of their origins.

    I have not done the research.

    My sources are silent on these place names but Professor Marshall’s book on Place Names says about My Lord’s Hill “by 1852. therefore, a freehold village existed with upmarket residences eight individuals owned the lots which varied in size from quarter of an acre to four acres.”

    It is possible that the names are those of some of the eight individuals.

    The book is a must have!!

    I don’t see it on Amazon yet but it is available in local bookstores, price $100.00.

    The only Mayers Land in St. Michael he refers to is at Richmond Gap to the east of Westbury Cemetery and he attributes the name to an Ernest and James Mayers who were taxed for the receipt of house and ground rent in 1900.

    He reckons there is a good chance My Lord’s Hill got its name from Lord Harewood at the Belle.


  12. Oh Lord, now there will arise a movement to change its name!!


  13. The Lascelles family first got a peerage in the late 18th century. But old man Fields also owned Blenheim which runs from My Lord’s Hill to the Back Ivy, a very small plantation. Pinder’s Gap runs on to Blenheim from Howell’s X Road.
    Then we got the Eyrie, wich was owned by Goddard, off Howell’s X Road, and runs up to the home of the Hanschell family, which has its entry off Two Mile Hill. Ilaro Court is at the bottom of the gap.
    So how did Tichbourne get its name? It was once called Robert’s tenantry road, suggesting it was part of the Haggatt Hall plantation, which once ran to Bird Hill.


  14. I have a great admiration for place names in Barbados and imagine a bus with its signage….To Half Moon Fort via Eagle Hall,Black Rock,Six Men’s,Sailor Gully…..or to Six Roads,via Condemn Gully,Two Mile Hill,Bussa Roundabout,Boarded Hall,Lower Greys,Four Roads…….or To Holy Innocents via Hangman’s Hill,Jack in the Box Gully,Stony Gully,Fire Hill,Cane Field…..pity the visitor enquiring “where are the 6 men? Where is the Jack in the Box?


  15. The Love We All Need Today

    Reparations is ♥ Love

    If Honky wanna talk Love ♥

    Honky must talk Reparations ♥


  16. John is providing the sort of knowledge that should be shared which in turn will allow for research and rebuttal when warranted.

    Its unfortunate that no one wishes to provide case studies of the early freed slave and coloured which would give us an insight in to their thinking,such studies would help us to better understand the societal norms of their communities at that time.

    Those with sense will understand the importance of this information and hopefully understand the difference in eras and how things were viewed. The past cannot be viewed through todays thinking and accepted norms.

    The transatlantic slavery occured,simple fact of life….stopped almost 200 years ago and produced Pelaus who are now in charge of their own destiny……these Pelaus have choices…..spend the rest of their lives looking backwards and blaming whitey,emulate the colonial system and lose your new found freedom or put together creative minds like those that existed in the past e.g. London Bourne and chart a vision for the future that will ensure the survival of our progeny for the foreseeable future in the Caribbean.

    The above was written for posterity as those presently contributing to this blog already have their blinkered minds made up as to what the past was and how it should be viewed based on todays interpretations.

    Hopefully these voices on here will do something tangible other than money and writing to help stop the present day slavery in todays world.


  17. I always heard that Bird Hill got its name because people shot birds in the pond that would have existed in the depression which now is pretty well drained.

    Not to be attempted in heavy rain!!

    Professor Marshall reckons it was because of the Tichbourne case which attracted a lot of intrest in the press.

    He thinks John Pitcher may have been responsible for the replacement of the name of what was once a property called Comfort Lodge.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tichborne_case


  18. You cannot lose when you do not play

    is how to play when the game is rigged

    Likewise
    you cannot rebut a dumb cunt who is so up their own arse trying to claim they won their game

    No names mentioned (J.V.MB.JN.DT)

  19. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    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….”

    Modern day slavery in Barbados in its most ugly forms presently are the minorities and others stealing sugar and other subsidies, stealing taxpayer funded contracts, stealingvp taxpayer’s money, pensioners money, bribing politicians and ministers to steal from the people and country, disenfranchising the majority population for their own self enrichment, compromising, misusing and abusing the judiciary, importing and trafficking guns and drugs into the black communities, controlling gangs and crimes in the black community, importing stolen cars….., money laundering through their businesses, exploitation of their preceived status on the island…, and not going to prison for their crimes.

    A more refined version of traditional slavery…but slavery none the less.


  20. Eagle was an old Quaker family name!!!

    My ancestor purchased 12 acres in 1837 from the Estate of William Francis Eagle.

    My ancestor was born in 1816, son of a former slave, manumitted perhaps in 1802 or thereabouts and her former owner.

    I believe the property was called Bartletts, small plantation I am guessing.

    Michael Eagle was named as a Friend in the will of John Coe in 1696.

    Also named as a Friend in the will of John Seares also in 1696.

    There is a Thomas Eagle who witnessed a will proved in 1658 so clearly a family with really early origins in Barbados

    Bartlett was also a Quaker family related I think to Burkes!!

  21. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Let’s make special mention of the insurance companies like CGI Insurance that misuse and exploit the supreme court in their fraudulent criminal game of refusing to pay injured claimants compensation, depriving them of ways to take better care of themselves….that too is modern day slavery.

    Now that it has been put in it’s proper context, there is no excuse, modern day slavery in Barbados must be dismantled.


  22. The Eyrie was also the home of Sir Conrad Reeves.

    Reeves was the first black AG and CJ of Barbados.

    At one time it was called Arbitration Hall … see Professor Marshall, reckons Reeves may have been responsible.

    It is in pretty bad repair.


  23. Torture, rape and slavery in Libya: why migrants must be able to leave …
    https://www.oxfam.org/…/torture-rape-and-slavery-libya-why-migrants-must-be-able-…
    Aug 9, 2017 – Rape, torture and slave labor are among the horrendous daily realities for people stuck in Libya who are desperately trying to escape war, …


  24. Vincent,
    This is some of the best information we have had on BU for ages. The challenge now is for people to refute these claims with evidence. I suggest John and Elombe can put their heads together and provide a comprehensive history of place names.
    @John – How about Seawell Plantation? I believe it is the only serious archaeological dig we have had in modern Barbados.


  25. This map shows where the world’s 30 million slaves live. There are …
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/…/this-map-shows-where-the-worlds-30-million-sla…
    Oct 17, 2013 – This is not some softened, by-modern-standards definition of slavery. … Sub-Saharan Africa is a swath of red, with many countries having …


  26. Hal

    One thing that is completely missing in the records is the meeting minutes of Friends in Barbados.

    That is probably why their contribution has been overlooked.

    The person who locates them will unlock the genealogies of several families because marriages and burials which every body assumes should be in the Parochial Registers are not.

    They are in these minutes.

    It is almost as if the Quakers have been written out of the History of Barbados.

    There are a couple of burial sites, like the Forte Vault at Hynes Hill, which are no longer sealed yet there is no sign of coffins …. a couple of human bones but no coffins.

    I suspect there are another couple at Golden Grove in St. Philip.

    My gut is the Anglican Church may be responsible perhaps for good reasons, the vault is carved in the rock of a quarry and there is a crack now.

    The workmanship at Haynes Hill is remarkable, unbelievable.

    One time I offered to take Trevor Marshall and show him the evidence but he demurred … claimed to be frightened for “white people duppies”!!


  27. Seawell, Christ Church
    c. 1663 Samuel Newton – BMHS xxxii 185
    1674 Seawell (Hon. Richard Seawell – Attorney General, 1684)
    1676 Bounders on Coverly
    1680 Richard Seawell, 550 ac, Christ Church
    1712 29/320 Elizabeth Seawell, widow, obtained judgement in Court of Common Pleas Precinct of Christ Church for £4800 & £2066 against Davers Seawell, executor of will of Thomas Seawell, dec’d. Levy on 1) 236 ac, Christ Church and stone dwelling house, land appraised @ £14 per ac
    2) 100 ac, Christ Church with 2 stone windmills
    Land conveyed to Elizabeth Seawell by james Milne, Marshall of the Court of Common Pleas

    c. 1714 Part of Seawell pltn sold to Edward Charnock, thus creating “Charnock’s” pltn
    1721 Seawell
    c. 1745 Seawell pltn & (Newton) came into ownership of Newton family
    1794 Newton Papers
    Seawell pltn jointly owned by brothers John & Thomas Lane of London, England, the heirs of the Newton family – see NEWTON

    1816 John Lane, £2635 damage (Watson Civilized Isle, 165 –Thomas Lane)
    1825 John Lane [1803 John took Seawell – Handler 158]
    Lucas Mss BMHS xvi 38 – The lanes descended from Mrs. Jane Layne who rode with Charles II and to Bristol and helped him escape

    1842–71 John N. Layne (344 in ’42) 343
    1859 Absentee
    1860 Steam
    1848 Jan 8 BMHS xiv 105 – to let or lease – Nathaniel Cave Attorney of J.N Lane 343½
    “Barbadian” – 8/1/1848
    To let, property of John Newton Lane 343½
    57 acres in cane to be reaped in ensuing crop
    66 acres well prepared reaped in 1849
    100 acres excellent sour grass
    1855 Jan 10 BMHS xxii 170 – to let – Nathaniel Cave Attorney of J.N Lane 343
    “Barbadian 8/1/1848 – to let
    1854 Rented: J.T. Rogers
    1858–71 Rented: N. Cave
    1879–98 J.H.B. Lane 343
    1901–14 G.A.O. Lane 343
    1921 Capt. O.A. Lane 343
    1929–37 G.A.O. Lane (357 in ’37) 359
    1957/8 Pur.: as site for aerodrome (Col. Report)
    1958 Jun 1 Pltn House included in Bldgs of Regional Police Centre (Commandant’s Report)


  28. Again … the work of Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree, made possible through Richard Goddard and others.

    The work exists, done by others and in the Archives and published in book form.


  29. Hal

    I agree that these sorts of dispassionate discussions without blame game,ad hominem and vituperative language is what will help carry this country forward through greater understanding of our past whilst we chart the future course for our country and the greater Caribbean.


  30. John,
    What about the Garrison, Beckles Road, Collymore Rock, Brittons Hill?

  31. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Bushman…ya should hear what is about to come out, now the floodgates are open, there is no stopping the flow of information.


  32. 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.

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

    I want to see how the spammers will stop information from coming out when they cant stop corruption in the parliament nor the guns and drugs and money laundering trade , thiefing of taxpayer’s and pensioner’s money, or bribing of politicians and ministers, they just as useless as the slaves of parliament.

    Lol


  34. Where is the NATIONAL VALUES REPORT ? Is there an online link?


  35. Collymore Rock – Sources silent but I know Sir Ernest Allan Collymore who was appointed CJ of Barbados in 1936 lived at Clapham, known on earlier maps at Mount Clapham.

    Too recent though.

    Can’t find a Collymore associated with Mount Clapham earlier.

    There is a “Mr. Collymore” on Barralier 1823 but he is well on in Christ Church beyond the Sundown Drive in.

    I have a reference to a sale of Collymore House which is now St. Gabriel’s School, it was the residence of the Quarter Master General.

    This is the closest I can come.

    The Rock part I think is Biblical … “Christ”.

    Rock appears all over in Barbados.

    Collymore Rock
    Black Rock
    Coles Rock
    Clement Rock
    The Rock
    Rock Halls all over

    I know of fields called Clarke’s Rock, Massiah Rock off the top of my head and a couple just called Rock.

    There is an area on the cliff by Codrington College called Goddard’s Rock.

    The earliest will I have found with the term Friend used is a Goddard will, 1649.

    Prepared to bet Goddards were Quakers too …. obvious link to business like the big six!!

    So I would surmise Collymore Rock has a link with Quakers too!


  36. Beckles Road ….. The Bay Plantation was at one time owned by John Alleyne Beckles, AG of Barbados.

    Believe Beckles Spring on Bay Street was the source of the outbreak of the Cholera Epidemic, 1854

    That is just opposite what was the Ice House on the way out of town.

    You will see a lot of coral.

    So my guess the name is linked to the ownership of the Bay Plantation


  37. “There has been a resurgence of “race and class” among the teaching and student populations of private schools here, a former university professor has charged.

    According to retired Deputy Principal of the Cave Hill campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) Professor Pedro Welch, the introduction of public schools had seen a drastic reduction in the number of private learning institutions here since 1962.

    However, in delivering a lecture Tuesday night on The Challenges and Contribution of the Private Schools Since 1950 at the Queen’s Park Steel Shed, the former Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Education said those that had survived had “other motivations” that were driven by race.

    “Increasingly in recent times in Barbados race and class is again becoming an issue which underlies the formation of some schools. It is unfortunate that this is happening, but it is happening.

    “There are also another couple other schools in Barbados that if you . . . look at the population of Barbados and its racial proportions, and you look at the number of persons going to those schools it becomes apparent that there are other factors that are impacting on the growth of the private sector schools in Barbados. In those schools there is an imbalance in racial profile,” he said, adding, “you can’t take out race and class out of that”.

    The former UWI professor also contended that teacher recruitment at these private schools was also based on race, as was the curriculum.

    “There are a couple of schools which formed within recent times in Barbados, when you examine the curriculum of the schools and look at their staffing requirements when they are advertising for staff, [they are looking for] people who they want to teach the international baccalaureate and other things that we don’t generally teach in our schools . . . . Those private schools that continue are the ones which primarily have other motivations in their continued existence. ”

    Welch’s presentation was one in a series of lectures organized by the Barbados Museum and Historical Society on The Evolution of The Educational System in Barbados: Challenges and Opportunities.

    He dealt extensively with the introduction to Barbados of a school system which was all privately funded by religious or other benevolent groups.”


  38. I think Sir Hilary Beckles was born in Rock Hall, St. Peter so no connection apparently to Becles Road … but a possible Quaker connection!!!!!!!!!!!!!


  39. The Bay, St. Michael – Bay Estate – Bay Plantation
    1656 3/29 Conveyance dated 1631. Abraham Needham sells to Capt Hy Harley, Governor, a pltn 20 chains on breath along the seashore & 400 poles inland (i.e ¼ mile by 1¼ miles to fort of Brittons Hill ridge. The so-called “Ligon” map shows “G.O” where “The Bay” I slocated and Pt. Campbell has very reasonably surmised in BMHS, 1974 that G.O. means Governors. The Ford map shows Hawley in the same position)
    Area 200 ac. Purchase price 300 lbs of tobacco. The land has already been sold 3 times since 1628. Several land sales of that period were 20 chains by 400 poles.

    1674 Hawley
    1680 Henry Hawley (son of Governor Hawley) 253 ac St. Michael (not in Census??)
    1721 Griffith
    1722 /32/272 Mortgage. Wm. Griffith of London, merchant to Hy Palmer of London, merchant, 340 ac in St. Michael. White servants. 140 slaves. £1450

    1725 Will 7/513
    Wm. Griffith. Bequeaths pltn in St. Michael to son-in-law Samuel ? Hannington, husband of testator’s daughter, Mary Hannington, until their son, testator’s grandson, Wm. Griffith Hannington reaches age of 21. (In the 18th Century the stream that ran through The Bay pltn into Carlisle Bay was called “Hannington’s Spring – Griffith Hughes “Natural History of B’dos” p. 6) 340 ac. Slaves – 34 men, 57 women, 49 children
    Advocate 92/3/29 p. 27

    1740 /90/205 Wm. Whitaker of St. Michael, merchant and his wife Loretta Maria Whitaker, neé Hannington, gives to Gedney Clarke of St. Michael, merchant as trustee for their mutual benefit and the benefit of the survivor of them “The Bay” pltn. St. Michael. 350 ac.
    Bounders: (W) The sea, (S) Hester Pocket, widow, ? Laws widow, John Hase, Nicholas Payne dec’d, (N) Wm. Sims, Thos. Phillips (E) James Shepherd, merchant, John Daperell, Wm. Barwick – 91 slaves

    1750 /109/130
    Wm. Whittaker of London, England, sells to Wm. Salmon of St. Michael, plantee for £1802 sterling, 106 ac of The Bay pltn, St. Michael.
    Borders: (N) Hon. Wm. Barwick (The Pine), (S) other lands of Wm. Salmon, (W) other lands of “The Bay” pltn.

    1763 /129/165
    “Pltn. Formerly of Wm. Whittaker but now of Francis Ford” given as bounder on “The Pine” pltn.

    1788 CO 28/62 p. 251 Beckles 221 slaves 449
    1763 Francis Ford (also owned Codrington, Friendship, Lears, Haggatt Hall, Ridge, Bentley)

    1772 Will 18/167
    Francis Ford II. Ford’s heir, his son Francis Ford III, subject to existing lease of “The Bay Pltn” to Alexander Sandiford.

    1790 On 3.1.1786 John Beckles and wife Elizabeth Beckles mortgaged “The Bay Pltn” in St. Michael to Francis Ford for £4000. (Probably Beckles bought in that year and Ford left £4000 as mortgage). Now Beckles wants to sell 22 ac of a total of 208 ac to the British Government £1165 sterling and seeks Ford’s permission as mortgagee. Ford agrees provided the £1165 is paid to him to reduce the mortgage.
    In the agreement to sell to the British Government, Beckles insists that he, his agents and servants must at all times have access to “the pond at the end of the land” to let out fresh water and let in sea water (the Esplanade area)
    See Ed. Stoute, Advocate: 84-02-19

    1823 Will 63/29
    Hon. John Beckles, Attorney General, bequeaths “The Bay” to his son Hon. John Alleyne Beckles (1823–1841)

    1832 BMHS iii 172
    Hon. John Alleyne Beckles, slave Mary Lashley 111 years old.
    1842 Bajan; see BMHS iv 142
    107 are sold in Chancery at death of Hon. J.A. Beckles. Bought by Hon. J. A. B’s son-in law Robert Hunte of St. Philip and John S. Sainsbury for £16,425 (Brandon 154)

    1864 At Robert Hunte’s death bequeathed to son Robert Beckles Hunte, who moved to England

    1822 Oct 12 Museum map 88. Hon John Beckles owner – see below 99a-12-27.
    .1846–50 Hunte & Sainsbury (John S. Sainsbury bought out by Hunte) 118 (120 in 1849)
    1854–1907 Robert Hunte (deceased in 1901) 128 (120 in 1854)
    1860 Robert Hunte Absentee
    1901 Wind
    By 1912 windmill pulled down – land being sold or rented
    1913–14 Col Hunte
    1929 Mabel Daniel 128 (112 in tenantry)
    1934–5 Mabel Daniel
    1829 Oct 20 BMHS iii 66. John A. Beckles ________________
    1825 J.A. Beckles
    1841 Mar 20 “Barbadian”
    To be sold in Chancery 1 April
    W.M. Oxley M in C (also Baxters)
    Beckles and wife complt. Beckles executor, others def___
    RB1/49/429 W.I Rum Refinery Ltd, lessor agree that Barbados Ice Co. Ltd, lessee, has right to use water from Beckles Spring, rising and issuing on lands of Bay Plantation.

    1917 British Union Oil Map (Archives) 104 ac
    1920 House only, sold to Skinner family. Advocate 92-03-29 page 27

    W. of Whitehaven Hutt – Culpeper Estate (Hist. B’dos 74/3)


  40. … again, work of Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree made possible by Richard Goddard and others


  41. Chinua Achebe on the positive legacies of colonialism
    Bruce Gilley
    African Affairs, Volume 115, Issue 461, 1 October 2016, Pages 646–663, https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adw030
    Published:
    14 October 2016

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    Abstract

    The late Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe was a key figure in the rise and persistence of anti-colonial ideology in Africa. Yet in his final work, Achebe made a clear statement about the positive legacies of colonialism, praising the British project of state formation and nation building in the lower Niger basin. A careful study of his writings and comments from 1958 until his death in 2013 shows that Achebe was never the simple anti-colonial figure that most assumed, and that his seeming reversal could be read as the culmination of a lifetime’s meditation on African history and politics. Achebe’s final views have significant paradigmatic implications for the knowledge relevant to national identity formation and state building in Africa today.


  42. Brittons, St. Michael
    1766 134/100 A bounder on Mount Clapham named as Francis Britton
    1825 John R. Phillips (Britons Hill)
    1844 302/412 Robert Henry Ashby & Mary Ann Ashby, executors of will of Robert Cooper Ashby were empowered by the will to sell “Brittons” pltn in St. Michael. They now do so to Geo. Drayton of St. Michael – £2000 paid on account.
    Bounders: John Alleyne Beckles, dec’d (The Bay), ? Matthew, Edward Phillips, Mary Phillips, The Inspector General’s Quarters, Sarah Ann Welch, Charles Groude, Charles Dallas, dec’d (Dalkeith), Sarah Kirton dec’d, Joseph Brown, Tobias Phillips, Mount Clapham pltn.

    1846–63 George Drayton (’63 dec’d) [died 1862 BMHS 30:40) 121 (122 in ’46 & ’50, 120 in ‘54

    1850 18 ac in Christ Church
    1862 Shilstone xxii 16 () Appraised £137 Pur: Drayton £7000 121
    1865–71 J.C. Drayton [1862 sale notice BMHS xxx 42] 121
    1870–1 Chancery Court Brown v Drayton
    1870 Chancery Court (with Rockley) Husbands et al v Harris et al
    1870 Shilstone xxii 23 (
    ) Pur: Nightengale & Co. £000 121
    1879–80 Nightengale & Co. 121
    1887–92 Carter & Co. 164
    1892 Chancery Court Drayton v Carter
    1898 L. Gowdey 164
    1899 W.W. Gowdey (in tenantry) 164
    1901–07 L. Gowdey 164
    1902–15 Chancery Court – Petition of Croney of Estate of Stokes
    1929 Brittons Ltd (tenantry) 85
    1934–35 Brittons Ltd (tenantry)

    W.W.A. 1921 April – Bought by syndicate – spots advertised for sale
    Times 31/4/85 H.H. Carter
    1917 British Union Oil Map (Archives) 86


  43. Again, work of Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree, made possible through Richard Goddard and others.

    The Mary Ann Ashby mentioned as executor begun life as a slave.

    She bore 10 children for Robert Cooper Ashby.

    She is my grandmother’s, great grandmother.

    Robert Henry Ashby was her son, brother of my ancestor.

    In addition to Brittons Hill, Burkes, 310 acres in Christ Church was also left to her and her 10 children.

    Burkes was sold in the 1870’s.

    RCA got Burkes from his wife, Mary Ann Burke, linked to the Bartletts I mentioned.

    Pretty sure RCA was a Quaker at death.

    RCA was also second in command at Oistins Fort in 186, under John Rycroft Best!!


  44. 1816

  45. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @ Vincent & Hal Austin,
    John’s snippets of local history are cute, but without an understanding of the social and economic forces which underlie them, are entirely useless in building a foundation for Bajan prosperity.

    John makes specious statements like “What you should do is to figure out who provided the subsidies in former times before Government took it on.” He hopes to induce gullible people to agree with him that it was well meaning Quakers. I would be deeply disappointed if either of you were that stupid. The “subsidies” were in the form of the stolen labour from enslaved people: pure and simple.

    Real historians, not bumbling amateurs like John, have long since established that the slave trade, and later slavery itself, were abolished by the British only after they no longer served British interests. But as I demonstrated time after time earlier in this thread, as soon as John is confronted with the evidence that proves him wrong he changes the subject and wanders off on another White supremacist tangent. The song and dance about Quaker beneficence is simply ex post facto excuse making to cover up their guilt for being so deeply implicated in something they knew to be evil in the first place.

    It’s kind of like the mafia Don who donates copiously to the church to try to wash the blood off of his own hands.


  46. John,
    Splendid.


  47. I read somewhere that Seawell was chosen as the site for the airport because the rock foundation there was the hardest found in Barbados.

  48. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @ Vincent
    Did you actually read the article on Achebe??

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