The University of the West Indies Press
JCH Vol. 57 No. 2 Art. 1 | Intricacies and Issues in Interweaving Public Records to Illuminate the Enslaved Community at Papine Estate, Jamaica in the Early 1800s
Suzanne Francis-Brown
JCH Vol. 57 No. 2 Art. 1 | Intricacies and Issues in Interweaving Public Records to Illuminate the Enslaved Community at Papine Estate, Jamaica in the Early 1800s
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Until an 1817 census mandated by the British government, the lives of enslaved individuals throughout the British West Indies remained outside the public record; the purview of largely unavailable plantation records and correspon-dence. Even the 1817 baseline and subsequent triennial returns provide very sparse information. Yet these and other public records can be interwoven to even dimly illuminate some of these majority populations, challenging the archival silences and contributing to our understanding of the character of lives within slavery. This article focuses on the Papine Estate, St Andrew, Jamaica, for which no estate records have been located, yet where this interweaving of diverse public records illuminates some aspects of the lives of the enslaved community and individuals, especially family — unusually including male as well as female participation.

Language
English
ISBN
2010153080001
Copyright
Editorial Board
About the Journal
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
Intricacies and Issues in Interweaving Public Records to Illuminate the Enslaved Community at Papine Estate, Jamaica in the Early 1800s | by Suzanne Francis-Brown
Abstract
Using the Slave Registration and Church of England Records
Papine Estate
Taking Names
Marriages
Finding Families
Multi-Generational Families
Conjoining Free and Enslaved
Conclusion
Notes
References
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