1 00:00:10,208 --> 00:00:11,583 [narrator] I'm a Glasgow boy, 2 00:00:11,583 --> 00:00:13,584 I was born and bred in the city, 3 00:00:13,584 --> 00:00:16,292 and of course I've been told all about the tobacco lords, 4 00:00:16,292 --> 00:00:20,375 and about how the wealth of Glasgow was based on our trade with the colonies, 5 00:00:20,375 --> 00:00:22,958 with the Caribbean, with the Americas. 6 00:00:22,958 --> 00:00:27,841 But there's an awful lot more to our colonial experience than I ever knew, 7 00:00:27,841 --> 00:00:29,559 and most Scots know, 8 00:00:29,559 --> 00:00:32,332 and perhaps more than they want to know. 9 00:01:05,750 --> 00:01:08,750 This is the beautiful west coast of Barbados, 10 00:01:08,750 --> 00:01:13,398 an up market holiday resort which attracts hundreds of Scots every year. 11 00:01:13,398 --> 00:01:19,667 They come of course for the beautiful sand, the palm trees the rum punches, and the sun. 12 00:01:19,667 --> 00:01:22,106 Little do they know, however, 13 00:01:22,106 --> 00:01:25,171 that 14 miles in that direction, the rugged east coast, 14 00:01:25,171 --> 00:01:27,875 there's an entirely different kind of Scottish community, 15 00:01:27,875 --> 00:01:32,042 a community of Sinclairs, of Baileys, of McCaskies,. 16 00:01:32,042 --> 00:01:36,200 But these families will not be going home after a fortnight in the sun. 17 00:01:41,667 --> 00:01:43,833 Heading inwards from the beaches and hotels, 18 00:01:43,833 --> 00:01:47,750 a maze of little roads criss cross the flat, coral island. 19 00:01:47,750 --> 00:01:50,208 Through the rural parishes of St. James and St. Thomas, 20 00:01:50,208 --> 00:01:55,264 towards wild seas and the St. John coast. 21 00:01:55,264 --> 00:01:58,458 The east of the island, from the Scottish district to Martin's Bay, 22 00:01:58,458 --> 00:02:00,604 is rocky and unyielding, 23 00:02:00,604 --> 00:02:04,875 but like our own Scotland, magnificent and dramatic. 24 00:02:04,875 --> 00:02:09,103 This is the last stronghold of a people who once spread throughout Barbados. 25 00:02:09,103 --> 00:02:12,417 People who -- if they only knew how-- could trace their ancestors 26 00:02:12,417 --> 00:02:16,348 back to Ireland, the west country, and Scotland, 27 00:02:16,348 --> 00:02:19,238 some even to Jacobites from Gaeltacht. 28 00:02:21,250 --> 00:02:23,585 Do you know how your family first came to Barbados? [/narrator] 29 00:02:24,417 --> 00:02:25,667 Really, I don't know. 30 00:02:25,667 --> 00:02:32,917 All I know is some family arrived from Scotland, in those days. 31 00:02:32,917 --> 00:02:35,042 Well, I born in Barbados, 32 00:02:35,042 --> 00:02:40,962 My Scottish, maybe great great great great grandfathers, that's all they could tell you. 33 00:02:42,042 --> 00:02:49,459 I understand that my father arrived, 34 00:02:49,459 --> 00:02:52,875 his parents from Scotland, 35 00:02:52,875 --> 00:02:54,756 what part of Scotland I don't know. 36 00:02:55,218 --> 00:02:57,958 The Scots have been, in a sense, 37 00:02:57,958 --> 00:03:01,209 you could say guilty of collective amnesia 38 00:03:01,209 --> 00:03:03,809 over both our role in empire 39 00:03:03,809 --> 00:03:07,478 and the role in the slaving system. 40 00:03:07,478 --> 00:03:09,800 And it's up to us as historians 41 00:03:09,800 --> 00:03:11,738 to reveal the Scottish past, warts and all. 42 00:03:12,583 --> 00:03:14,792 And one of the areas that's now being revealed, 43 00:03:14,792 --> 00:03:18,391 or is coming into greater significance, 44 00:03:18,391 --> 00:03:20,389 is the role of the Scots in the Caribbean islands. 45 00:03:22,375 --> 00:03:26,875 [narrator] When it was settled, Barbados was an uninhabited island in the distant Caribbean. 46 00:03:26,875 --> 00:03:29,750 Barbadians themselves called it "Little England", 47 00:03:29,750 --> 00:03:34,552 but in fact, the first people to make serious money here were Scots. 48 00:03:34,552 --> 00:03:40,750 In 1627 King Charles I appointed a Scot, James Hay, as governor of Barbados. 49 00:03:40,750 --> 00:03:45,466 Both men were determined to see a good return from their new colony. [/narrator] 50 00:03:47,788 --> 00:03:52,107 Barbados was chosen because it's owned by the Hays, 51 00:03:52,107 --> 00:03:54,847 a border family who become the Earls of Carlisle. 52 00:03:54,847 --> 00:03:57,958 But to make an island like Barbados pay, 53 00:03:57,958 --> 00:03:59,862 it's the first British island, 54 00:03:59,862 --> 00:04:03,020 you have to have people to work the land. 55 00:04:03,020 --> 00:04:07,750 The Hays desperately looked back to their own area, the borders of west coast Scotland 56 00:04:07,750 --> 00:04:10,042 for this supply of labour. 57 00:04:10,042 --> 00:04:17,371 And it is part of their business plan to encourage the movement of people onto the island. 58 00:04:18,500 --> 00:04:22,125 [narrator] When we think of Scots leaving their homeland to make their fortunes 59 00:04:22,125 --> 00:04:24,625 or at least ease their poverty, 60 00:04:24,625 --> 00:04:28,190 and going to the Americas in the 18th century, the 19th century, 61 00:04:28,190 --> 00:04:33,500 we think of Greenoch and Glasgow and Port Glasgow. 62 00:04:33,500 --> 00:04:35,458 But in fact earlier, in the 17th century, 63 00:04:35,458 --> 00:04:39,042 many Scots left from here, from Ayre, 64 00:04:39,042 --> 00:04:41,252 and not necessarily because they wanted to. [/narrator] 65 00:04:43,934 --> 00:04:46,256 I learned about the 1640's, 66 00:04:46,256 --> 00:04:50,760 we had our first joint ventures to Barbados. 67 00:04:50,760 --> 00:04:54,708 And the first one we know is the Rebecca of Dublin, 68 00:04:54,708 --> 00:04:57,250 is brought up to Britannia Ayre, 69 00:04:57,250 --> 00:04:59,250 on the Firth of Clyde. 70 00:04:59,250 --> 00:05:05,042 Ayre is then the major conduit for the emerging Glasgow merchant paternity. 71 00:05:05,042 --> 00:05:08,268 Controlled tightly by guilds, 72 00:05:08,268 --> 00:05:11,958 and it's these guild brothers that set out the first ventures. 73 00:05:11,958 --> 00:05:16,458 Well we know about this because it's also a plague year, 1642, 74 00:05:16,458 --> 00:05:19,832 and they believe they're all going to die of the plague, 75 00:05:19,832 --> 00:05:27,250 so they have a communal confession in St John's church, which still stands in Ayre. 76 00:05:27,250 --> 00:05:29,677 And of over the 15 confessions they make, 77 00:05:29,677 --> 00:05:35,750 most of them, you'd expect bad behaviour, drunkenness, whoring women all around the Caribbean, 78 00:05:35,750 --> 00:05:38,593 it's #15 itself that's interesting. 79 00:05:38,593 --> 00:05:43,609 They confessed to carrying away the children to the West Indies. 80 00:05:43,609 --> 00:05:47,603 And this is the first mention of carrying indentured servants. 81 00:05:47,603 --> 00:05:50,777 So basically they're clearing out the _ 82 00:05:52,833 --> 00:05:59,081 This is the start of the trade in people to Barbados. 83 00:06:00,513 --> 00:06:02,417 [narrator] Scots who couldn't make a living at home 84 00:06:02,417 --> 00:06:04,368 signed an indenture, 85 00:06:04,368 --> 00:06:06,375 selling their labour to planters in the new world 86 00:06:06,375 --> 00:06:07,917 for an agreed period, 87 00:06:07,917 --> 00:06:09,755 at the end of which -if they survived- 88 00:06:09,755 --> 00:06:13,005 they were promised a piece of land. 89 00:06:13,005 --> 00:06:15,750 The indentures weren't worth the paper they were written on. 90 00:06:15,750 --> 00:06:17,835 Was there really any difference then 91 00:06:17,835 --> 00:06:20,825 between a white indentured servant and a black slave? [/narrator] 92 00:06:22,833 --> 00:06:26,333 It didn't matter if you were an indentured servant or a slave, 93 00:06:28,410 --> 00:06:30,351 if you were subjected to a severe whipping, 94 00:06:30,351 --> 00:06:35,125 the whip cracked equally severely on a white man 95 00:06:35,125 --> 00:06:37,875 just as it did on a black man. 96 00:06:41,167 --> 00:06:43,708 They were treated equally horrifically, 97 00:06:43,708 --> 00:06:47,583 and suffered equal horrific punishments. 98 00:06:47,583 --> 00:06:55,042 But African slavery could be transferred from generation to generation. 99 00:06:55,042 --> 00:06:57,292 If you were an African slave, 100 00:06:57,292 --> 00:06:59,000 who'd been brought over to Barbados 101 00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:00,625 and you had children, 102 00:07:00,625 --> 00:07:03,583 your child would have been born into slavery. 103 00:07:03,583 --> 00:07:05,750 If you were a white endentured servant 104 00:07:05,750 --> 00:07:10,428 who had been condemned to servitude and you had children on the island, 105 00:07:10,428 --> 00:07:11,868 they were born free. 106 00:07:11,868 --> 00:07:14,773 So there is a marked legal distinction. 107 00:07:18,787 --> 00:07:22,042 There is the concept of the "white negro", 108 00:07:22,042 --> 00:07:25,382 and certainly, you know, in a legal sense they probably were slaves 109 00:07:25,382 --> 00:07:29,500 because they were innumerated as part of the chattals, 110 00:07:29,500 --> 00:07:35,645 in other words the property of the individual, ehm, who held their indentures. 111 00:07:35,645 --> 00:07:39,381 So in that sense, you know, they were no different legally from black slaves. 112 00:07:41,500 --> 00:07:44,875 [narrator] Despite Scotland being a rich source of indentured labour, 113 00:07:44,875 --> 00:07:48,648 demand on the island outstripped supply. 114 00:07:48,648 --> 00:07:50,792 But there was a solution. 115 00:07:50,792 --> 00:07:52,505 War. [/narrator] 116 00:07:53,505 --> 00:07:56,000 Things were taking a dramatic turn 117 00:07:56,000 --> 00:08:02,250 when Oliver Cromwell invaded Scotland at the Battle of Dunbar. 118 00:08:02,250 --> 00:08:06,899 On one hand the Hays lose control of the island, 119 00:08:06,899 --> 00:08:11,125 on the other hand, there's a new supply of labour, 120 00:08:11,125 --> 00:08:13,130 prisoners of war. 121 00:08:15,833 --> 00:08:18,556 The ultimate answer is to transport them, 122 00:08:18,556 --> 00:08:20,621 and Barbados is where they're sent. 123 00:08:27,583 --> 00:08:30,305 Here we are in Greyfriars Graveyard, 124 00:08:30,305 --> 00:08:31,833 and this is really where it all happened. 125 00:08:31,833 --> 00:08:34,392 This is the trigger zone for, eh, 126 00:08:34,392 --> 00:08:36,807 which will ricochet all the way to Barbados, 127 00:08:36,807 --> 00:08:43,458 because it's here that youre dissenting, eh, senior leaders 128 00:08:43,458 --> 00:08:46,833 of the Scottish rebellion against the king, Charles 1, 129 00:08:46,833 --> 00:08:53,458 come into this graveyard and sign a massive document called the National Covenant, 130 00:08:53,458 --> 00:08:59,583 which binds them to resist Charles' ideas about imposing Episcopalianism, 131 00:08:59,583 --> 00:09:04,375 the Church of England's style of bishops etc on Presbyterian Scotland, 132 00:09:04,375 --> 00:09:08,667 and by doing so, we start this great conflict. 133 00:09:08,667 --> 00:09:13,792 So you can really claim that the English Civil War was actually triggered from here, 134 00:09:13,792 --> 00:09:16,235 and cascades down south, and to Ireland. 135 00:09:18,333 --> 00:09:20,458 The monument we're walking towards now, 136 00:09:20,458 --> 00:09:24,167 is possibly the most emotive part of that killing time, 137 00:09:24,167 --> 00:09:32,256 before it goes on, and all these prisoners were sent off as slaves. 138 00:09:32,256 --> 00:09:34,325 Barbado'd. 139 00:09:35,367 --> 00:09:36,267 And here we have it. 140 00:09:39,458 --> 00:09:42,833 Being Barbados'd was equivalent to being transported, 141 00:09:42,833 --> 00:09:47,083 ehm, you've got to remember the fact that these were not idyllic islands in that period, 142 00:09:47,083 --> 00:09:49,833 these were lethal areas with very high death rates, 143 00:09:49,833 --> 00:09:51,875 especially for Europeans, 144 00:09:51,875 --> 00:09:54,826 and especially through yellow fever. 145 00:09:55,334 --> 00:10:01,188 [narrator] So this is where the covenanters were held before being shipped off. [/narrator] 146 00:10:01,188 --> 00:10:02,667 Some were here for up to two years. 147 00:10:02,667 --> 00:10:04,810 [narrator] So they're locked in here, 148 00:10:04,810 --> 00:10:06,482 are they fed and watered and covered?[/narrator] 149 00:10:06,482 --> 00:10:08,792 Barely, no cover. 150 00:10:08,792 --> 00:10:13,667 They're not dying here, but the survivors were all marched off and sold, 151 00:10:13,667 --> 00:10:16,667 some of them would have appeared in Barbados, 152 00:10:16,667 --> 00:10:18,792 because the market was strong there. 153 00:10:18,792 --> 00:10:25,167 [narrator] But therefore the people who are finally indentured and sent to the colonies, 154 00:10:25,167 --> 00:10:27,891 arrive here in pretty bad state in the first place. 155 00:10:27,891 --> 00:10:30,250 If they've been held out here for two years, 156 00:10:30,250 --> 00:10:31,560 and after a war, 157 00:10:31,560 --> 00:10:34,833 they're not arriving in Barbados really full of strength and very well fed. [/narrator] 158 00:10:34,833 --> 00:10:37,417 I don't think they would have fetched much. 159 00:10:37,417 --> 00:10:40,667 And knowing the state of vittles on both ships as I do, 160 00:10:40,667 --> 00:10:44,719 I think most of them didn't made the passage to be honest. 161 00:10:45,680 --> 00:10:46,865 A great tragedy. 162 00:10:53,542 --> 00:10:56,000 [narrator] Transportees were shackled and kept below deck 163 00:10:56,000 --> 00:10:59,625 in a voyage that lasted anything from 8 to 10 weeks. 164 00:10:59,625 --> 00:11:05,167 Conditions were so bad that many of them died long before they reached the Caribbean. 165 00:11:05,167 --> 00:11:08,333 There are no records of how traders treated their Scottish cargo, 166 00:11:08,333 --> 00:11:11,083 but we do know what they would have faced on arrival, 167 00:11:11,083 --> 00:11:14,875 thanks to the writings of visitors the island like Richard Ligon, 168 00:11:14,875 --> 00:11:20,696 who published a true and exact history of the island of Barbados in 1657. 169 00:11:25,333 --> 00:11:28,917 Professor Fred Smith, of William and Mary University on Virginia, 170 00:11:28,917 --> 00:11:31,667 is on an archeological dig in Barbados. 171 00:11:31,667 --> 00:11:34,500 Fred's students tried to imagine what life must have been like 172 00:11:34,500 --> 00:11:38,154 for those early arrivals who had to build their own shelters. 173 00:11:38,154 --> 00:11:40,832 Richard Ligon paints a vivid picture of those difficult days: 174 00:11:43,263 --> 00:11:44,875 "Upon the arrival of any ship 175 00:11:44,875 --> 00:11:46,417 the planters go aboard 176 00:11:46,417 --> 00:11:48,375 and having bought such of them as they like, 177 00:11:48,375 --> 00:11:50,625 send them with a guide to his plantation, 178 00:11:50,625 --> 00:11:54,417 and being come, commands them instantly to make their cabins, 179 00:11:54,417 --> 00:11:56,125 which they not knowing how to do, 180 00:11:56,125 --> 00:12:00,917 are to be advised by other of their servants that are their seniors. 181 00:12:00,917 --> 00:12:03,093 But if they be churlish and will not show them, 182 00:12:03,093 --> 00:12:05,375 or if material be wanting to make them cabins, 183 00:12:05,375 --> 00:12:08,758 then they are to lay on the ground that night. 184 00:12:08,758 --> 00:12:12,000 These cabins are to be made of sticks with some plantain leaves, 185 00:12:12,000 --> 00:12:16,083 under some little shade that may keep the rain off. 186 00:12:16,944 --> 00:12:21,833 Their supper being a few potatoes and water and __ for drink, 187 00:12:21,833 --> 00:12:26,125 the next day they are rung our with a bell to work at 6 o'clock in the morning, 188 00:12:26,125 --> 00:12:27,583 til the bell ring again, 189 00:12:27,583 --> 00:12:29,000 which is at 11 o'clock, 190 00:12:29,000 --> 00:12:31,375 and then they return and are sent to dinner 191 00:12:31,375 --> 00:12:33,760 and then they return and are set to dinner, 192 00:12:33,760 --> 00:12:35,669 either with a mess of , , or potatoes." 193 00:12:38,250 --> 00:12:41,958 Professor Carl Watson is a decendant of the first immigrants to Barbados, 194 00:12:41,958 --> 00:12:45,262 and a leading historian of the island's poor whites. 195 00:12:46,328 --> 00:12:47,833 Well history has two levels. 196 00:12:47,833 --> 00:12:51,808 History seen from above, from the point of view of the powerful; 197 00:12:51,808 --> 00:12:53,750 and history seen from below. 198 00:12:53,750 --> 00:12:59,250 And usually those from below were either illiterate and hence left no written records 199 00:12:59,250 --> 99:59:59,999 of their daily lives...