Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 3 of 4
-
0:00 - 0:06...emancipation, the blacks were able to do anything they wanted,
-
0:06 - 0:10and the poor whites had a very rough time.
-
0:13 - 0:15Almost immediately at emancipation,
-
0:15 - 0:20the plantation owners said "we no longer need militia tenants,
-
0:20 - 0:25we no longer, the freed people will no longer receive clothing from us,
-
0:25 - 0:30and so we don't need these white seamstresses any more to produce this clothing",
-
0:30 - 0:32and they just ordered them off the plantation.
-
0:35 - 0:40[narrator] Displaced, the poor whites were reduced to living in chattal houses like the former slaves.
-
0:40 - 0:42Unique to Barbados, these cheap wooden houses
-
0:42 - 0:45could be moved from plantation to plantation,
-
0:45 - 0:47as workers chased scarce jobs. [/narrator]
-
0:51 - 0:54"They would walk half over the island to demand alms,
-
0:54 - 0:58or, depend for their subsistence on the charity of slaves.
-
0:58 - 1:01Yet, they are as proud as Lucifer himself,
-
1:01 - 1:05and in virtue of their freckled, ditchwater faces,
-
1:05 - 1:10consider themselves on a level with every gentleman in the island."
-
1:14 - 1:17[narrator] Robert Burns almost indentured himself in the West Indies.
-
1:17 - 1:20The poet who wrote "A Slave's Lament".
-
1:20 - 1:22Island paradise?
-
1:22 - 1:23If you're lucky.
-
1:23 - 1:28But we mustn't forget that history also has its victims in the Scottish diaspora. [/narrator]
-
1:29 - 1:31You have the remarkable fact that, ehm,
-
1:31 - 1:37the national poet, Robert Burns, eh, would have been on his way to become,
-
1:37 - 1:40eh, a book keeper, that was the euphemistic phrase used.
-
1:40 - 1:42A book keeper.
-
1:42 - 1:45If it hadn't been for the success of his first publication
-
1:45 - 1:48of the Kilmarnock edition of his poetry.
-
1:48 - 1:49Probably one of the great ironies
-
1:49 - 1:53is that the original population of Barbados and other islands
-
1:53 - 1:56were prisoners who were coerced,
-
1:56 - 1:59prisoners who went there you know to, through no design of their own.
-
2:00 - 2:02So it could be argued, very ironic in a sense,
-
2:02 - 2:05that those Scots who succeeded later,
-
2:05 - 2:09who extracted much profit and fortunes from the Caribbean,
-
2:09 - 2:14were building their achievements on the blood, on the suffering,
-
2:14 - 2:17of their fellow countrymen, of the, of the, of the 17th century.
-
2:17 - 2:20But that has never stopped any 18th century Scot.
-
2:20 - 2:24The mo, the important thing is the profit.
-
2:24 - 2:27The, I mean, the lust for gain in this society,
-
2:27 - 2:29especially among the elites,
-
2:29 - 2:31was quite extraordinary.
-
2:33 - 2:35[narrator] And not all Redlegs remained poor.
-
2:35 - 2:38Richard Goddard in one of the richest businessmen on Barbados,
-
2:38 - 2:42and enormously proud of his Redleg ancestry.
-
2:42 - 2:44His grandfather walked barefoot to town,
-
2:44 - 2:46opened a rum shop,
-
2:46 - 2:47and built an empire. [/narrator]
-
2:52 - 2:55This photograph of nine fishermen on Bath Beach
-
2:55 - 2:57was taken about 1908.
-
2:57 - 2:58There are black and white fishermen,
-
2:58 - 3:03and the one on the back row to the right is Thomas Henry Goddard,
-
3:03 - 3:07and that would be my grandfather's uncle.
-
3:07 - 3:11And you notice that they're all wearing bag, which is the jute bag,
-
3:11 - 3:14where head and shoulders were cut out,
-
3:14 - 3:17and they were all barefooted.
-
3:17 - 3:19There's a bottle of rum on the ground,
-
3:19 - 3:24I would suspect that they were probably bribed to stand still for the photograph.
-
3:26 - 3:28I remember my brother in law telling me
-
3:28 - 3:32that once he asked my grandfather, who is now in his 80's,
-
3:32 - 3:35Mr. Joe, tell me about the good old days when you were a boy,
-
3:35 - 3:37and my grandfather start to cry.
-
3:37 - 3:39He said "No, Dennis, they were not good days,
-
3:39 - 3:41I wouldn't wish them on my worst enemy.
-
3:41 - 3:46I knew what it was like to be hungry, sick, no job, no opportunity,
-
3:46 - 3:50and I certainly would not wish to call those good days"
-
3:53 - 3:56In 1834 when the police force was formed,
-
3:56 - 3:59and the military tenants really were, were then put off the land,
-
3:59 - 4:01they weren't needed any longer,
-
4:01 - 4:04and these people had been on those, as military tenants,
-
4:04 - 4:06for probably 150 years.
-
4:09 - 4:12The biggest majority were _,
-
4:12 - 4:15they ended up there because the land was poor.
-
4:17 - 4:21We're at the top of Hackleton's Cliff, and in the parish of St. John,
-
4:21 - 4:27and eh this was not only a physical barrier, but a social barrier as well.
-
4:27 - 4:29Those who lived below, the poor whites,
-
4:29 - 4:35they were identified as people coming from below the cliffs, so it was a barrier for them.
-
4:35 - 4:35And there were 3 points you could get out,
-
4:37 - 4:41either the gates, monkey jump, or the ladders.
-
4:41 - 4:44And over there to my right, where those coconut trees are,
-
4:44 - 4:48is the base of monkey jump.
-
4:48 - 4:52It would come up probably about 200 hundred yards,
-
4:52 - 4:55you had to come on all fours at times,
-
4:55 - 4:58and then at times in crop you would carry cane on your head,
-
4:58 - 5:03probably bundles of 8 canes, probably weighed 40 or 50 lbs,
-
5:03 - 5:08and you got $1.44 or 6 shillings for 10 of cane.
-
5:10 - 5:11They were living here because that's where land was cheapest.
-
5:11 - 5:15It was very rocky, it was not suitable for cultivation for the plantations,
-
5:15 - 5:19and they would pay about $8/acre per year rent.
-
5:19 - 5:23But down here you really got it for $4, it was just so bad it would have been reduced.
-
5:23 - 5:26You had to plant among the stones to get some form of a crop.
-
5:28 - 5:29It was extremely hard.
-
5:29 - 5:32I don't think that many of them really knew much about their forebearers,
-
5:32 - 5:36they knew they'd come from Scotland and Ireland, or somewhere in England.
-
5:36 - 5:39In fact England covered everything, the mother country that referred to.
-
5:41 - 5:44Their little world, even to go to town, some people who'd lived their whole life here,
-
5:44 - 5:47cannot go into Bridgetown.
-
5:52 - 5:55[narrator] We hear much about Scots who've traveled abroad and found riches,
-
5:55 - 5:58success, contributed to the progress of nations.
-
5:58 - 6:00Not all were so lucky.
-
6:00 - 6:03Many fled poverty only to find it again.
-
6:03 - 6:08Barbados is an obect lesson in what happens to a people who are robbed of their identity.
-
6:10 - 6:14St. Margaret's Anglican Church is on the hill above Martin's Bay.
-
6:14 - 6:18I'm 3,000 miles away from home, from Scotland,
-
6:18 - 6:21yet outside that church I meet an elderly man,
-
6:21 - 6:24a man with whom I've more in common than I could ever have guessed. [/narrator]
-
6:34 - 6:35[narrator] Just down there, there's a Glenburnie?
-
6:36 - 6:38I live quite near Glenburnie in Scotland.
-
6:41 - 6:42What did your grandfather do?
-
6:49 - 6:50And that must've been really hard...
-
7:23 - 7:25This is yer country.
-
7:25 - 7:26This is yer home.
-
7:26 - 7:28You're also Barbadian, but do you feel Scottish as well?
-
7:34 - 7:39[narrator] Irish photographer Sheena Jolley has known the Redlegs of Martin's Bay for years.
-
7:39 - 7:42Now she's back, photographing this diminishing population [/narrator]
-
7:43 - 7:46Initially I went in, and they were quite suspicious of me,
-
7:47 - 7:50but I was on my own, I was female, and I had worked there,
-
7:50 - 7:54so, ehm. they allowed me to talk to them,
-
7:54 - 7:58and the more time I spent with them, the more I got to know them.
-
7:58 - 8:02The poor whites have been suppressed since the 17th century,
-
8:02 - 8:06and really, nothing has changed.
-
8:06 - 8:11They were looked down upon by the blacks, and by the better-off whites.
-
8:11 - 8:13That hadn't changed in 2000,
-
8:13 - 8:15I'm pleased to say that since I've come back,
-
8:15 - 8:17I think there's a huge change there.
-
8:17 - 8:22And I think before there was very little integration between the blacks and the whites.
-
8:28 - 8:32When I photographed Aileen Downey in 2000,
-
8:32 - 8:34she actually lived in a stone house,
-
8:34 - 8:37but there was no running water, no electricity,
-
8:37 - 8:41and once a week she boiled water to wash herself.
-
8:46 - 8:47Life was hard.
-
8:47 - 8:49She was collecting coconuts, splitting the husks,
-
8:49 - 8:54and, and selling those to a nursery to grow orchids.
-
8:54 - 8:57She was in her 70's, she was very fit.
-
8:57 - 9:01So it was interesting for me to re-photograoh her.
-
9:01 - 9:03Perhaps her life was easier in some ways,
-
9:03 - 9:06but her living circumstances were dreadful.
-
9:06 - 9:07They were worse.
-
9:07 - 9:08But she was still happy.
-
9:08 - 9:10In spite of all that adversity,
-
9:10 - 9:12she was still smiling, still telling jokes.
-
9:38 - 9:40[narrator] Joyce and Nita are Aileen Downey's sisters,
-
9:40 - 9:42who also live in a chattal house in Martin's Bay.
-
9:46 - 9:47What kind of fishing?
-
9:55 - 9:56Fantastic.
-
9:56 - 9:58Did you sell the fish or...
-
10:12 - 10:14No that hard a life!
-
10:14 - 10:16Eating lobster, that sounds great.
-
10:30 - 10:33The Redlegs of Barbados run a barter economy.
-
10:33 - 10:35Everyone helps one another.
-
10:35 - 10:39Some breed pigs, others grow breadfruit, some still fish.
-
10:39 - 10:43Between them, they survive as a unit, a community.
-
10:49 - 10:51So that's a really Scottish name!
-
10:53 - 10:54Do you know about your Scottish connection?
-
11:09 - 11:10That's a shame isn't it...
-
12:54 - 12:57My name is Eustace Norris.
-
12:57 -_ my old parents, my family...
- Title:
- Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 3 of 4
- Description:
-
The west coast of Barbados is known as a favorite winter destination for British tourists, ranging from the upmarket Sandy Lane resort to the all-drinks-included package holiday crowd arriving by economy class. Many will come from Scotland, but few will realise that just fourteen miles away on the rocky east side of the island live a community of McCluskies, Sinclairs and Baileys who are not, as might be expected, black Bajans bearing the family names given by slave owners centuries ago, but poor whites eking out a subsistence existence. Known as the Redlegs, they are the direct descendants of the Scots transported to Barbados by Cromwell after the Civil War. Scottish author and broadcaster Chris Dolan went to meet them to discover why they are still here 350 years later, what they know about their roots, and what their prospects are today when they are the poorest community on the island. Chris speaks to leading historians in Barbados and Scotland about how their ancestors were treated when they first arrived. Was their plight as severe as that of the black slaves from Africa? Nearly two centuries after emancipation, this Redleg community has yet to find a role on the island, where it is damned by association with the days of slavery, even though many of its forbears were victims themselves. In recent years, it has begun to come out of its racial isolation; could there yet be a hopeful future for this lost Scottish tribe?
- Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 13:01
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 3 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project added a translation |