Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4
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0:10 - 0:12[narrator] I'm a Glasgow boy,
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0:12 - 0:14I was born and bred in the city,
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0:14 - 0:16and of course I've been told all about the tobacco lords,
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0:16 - 0:20and about how the wealth of Glasgow was based on our trade with the colonies,
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0:20 - 0:23with the Caribbean, with the Americas.
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0:23 - 0:28But there's an awful lot more to our colonial experience than I ever knew,
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0:28 - 0:30and most Scots know,
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0:30 - 0:32and perhaps more than they want to know.
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1:06 - 1:09This is the beautiful west coast of Barbados,
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1:09 - 1:13an up market holiday resort which attracts hundreds of Scots every year.
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1:13 - 1:20They come of course for the beautiful sand, the palm trees the rum punches, and the sun.
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1:20 - 1:22Little do they know, however,
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1:22 - 1:25that 14 miles in that direction, the rugged east coast,
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1:25 - 1:28there's an entirely different kind of Scottish community,
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1:28 - 1:32a community of Sinclairs, of Baileys, of McCaskies,.
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1:32 - 1:36But these families will not be going home after a fortnight in the sun.
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1:42 - 1:44Heading inwards from the beaches and hotels,
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1:44 - 1:48a maze of little roads criss cross the flat, coral island.
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1:48 - 1:50Through the rural parishes of St. James and St. Thomas,
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1:50 - 1:55towards wild seas and the St. John coast.
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1:55 - 1:58The east of the island, from the Scottish district to Martin's Bay,
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1:58 - 2:01is rocky and unyielding,
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2:01 - 2:05but like our own Scotland, magnificent and dramatic.
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2:05 - 2:09This is the last stronghold of a people who once spread throughout Barbados.
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2:09 - 2:12People who -- if they only knew how-- could trace their ancestors
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2:12 - 2:16back to Ireland, the west country, and Scotland,
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2:16 - 2:19some even to Jacobites from Gaeltacht.
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2:21 - 2:24Do you know how your family first came to Barbados? [/narrator]
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2:24 - 2:26Really, I don't know.
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2:26 - 2:33All I know is some family arrived from Scotland, in those days.
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2:33 - 2:35Well, I born in Barbados,
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2:35 - 2:41My Scottish, maybe great great great great grandfathers, that's all they could tell you.
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2:42 - 2:49I understand that my father arrived,
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2:49 - 2:53his parents from Scotland,
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2:53 - 2:55what part of Scotland I don't know.
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2:55 - 2:58The Scots have been, in a sense,
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2:58 - 3:01you could say guilty of collective amnesia
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3:01 - 3:04over both our role in empire
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3:04 - 3:07and the role in the slaving system.
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3:07 - 3:10And it's up to us as historians
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3:10 - 3:12to reveal the Scottish past, warts and all.
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3:13 - 3:15And one of the areas that's now being revealed,
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3:15 - 3:18or is coming into greater significance,
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3:18 - 3:20is the role of the Scots in the Caribbean islands.
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3:22 - 3:27[narrator] When it was settled, Barbados was an uninhabited island in the distant Caribbean.
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3:27 - 3:30Barbadians themselves called it "Little England",
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3:30 - 3:35but in fact, the first people to make serious money here were Scots.
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3:35 - 3:41In 1627 King Charles I appointed a Scot, James Hay, as governor of Barbados.
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3:41 - 3:45Both men were determined to see a good return from their new colony. [/narrator]
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3:48 - 3:52Barbados was chosen because it's owned by the Hays,
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3:52 - 3:55a border family who become the Earls of Carlisle.
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3:55 - 3:58But to make an island like Barbados pay,
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3:58 - 4:00it's the first British island,
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4:00 - 4:03you have to have people to work the land.
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4:03 - 4:08The Hays desperately looked back to their own area, the borders of west coast Scotland
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4:08 - 4:10for this supply of labour.
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4:10 - 4:17And it is part of their business plan to encourage the movement of people onto the island.
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4:18 - 4:22[narrator] When we think of Scots leaving their homeland to make their fortunes
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4:22 - 4:25or at least ease their poverty,
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4:25 - 4:28and going to the Americas in the 18th century, the 19th century,
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4:28 - 4:34we think of Greenoch and Glasgow and Port Glasgow.
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4:34 - 4:35But in fact earlier, in the 17th century,
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4:35 - 4:39many Scots left from here, from Ayre,
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4:39 - 4:41and not necessarily because they wanted to. [/narrator]
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4:44 - 4:46I learned about the 1640's,
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4:46 - 4:51we had our first joint ventures to Barbados.
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4:51 - 4:55And the first one we know is the Rebecca of Dublin,
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4:55 - 4:57is brought up to Britannia Ayre,
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4:57 - 4:59on the Firth of Clyde.
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4:59 - 5:05Ayre is then the major conduit for the emerging Glasgow merchant paternity.
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5:05 - 5:08Controlled tightly by guilds,
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5:08 - 5:12and it's these guild brothers that set out the first ventures.
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5:12 - 5:16Well we know about this because it's also a plague year, 1642,
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5:16 - 5:20and they believe they're all going to die of the plague,
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5:20 - 5:27so they have a communal confession in St John's church, which still stands in Ayre.
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5:27 - 5:30And of over the 15 confessions they make,
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5:30 - 5:36most of them, you'd expect bad behaviour, drunkenness, whoring women all around the Caribbean,
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5:36 - 5:39it's #15 itself that's interesting.
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5:39 - 5:44They confessed to carrying away the children to the West Indies.
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5:44 - 5:48And this is the first mention of carrying indentured servants.
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5:48 - 5:51So basically they're clearing out the _
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5:53 - 5:59This is the start of the trade in people to Barbados.
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6:01 - 6:02[narrator] Scots who couldn't make a living at home
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6:02 - 6:04signed an indenture,
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6:04 - 6:06selling their labour to planters in the new world
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6:06 - 6:08for an agreed period,
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6:08 - 6:10at the end of which -if they survived-
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6:10 - 6:13they were promised a piece of land.
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6:13 - 6:16The indentures weren't worth the paper they were written on.
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6:16 - 6:18Was there really any difference then
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6:18 - 6:21between a white indentured servant and a black slave? [/narrator]
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6:23 - 6:26It didn't matter if you were an indentured servant or a slave,
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6:28 - 6:30if you were subjected to a severe whipping,
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6:30 - 6:35the whip cracked equally severely on a white man
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6:35 - 6:38just as it did on a black man.
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6:41 - 6:44They were treated equally horrifically,
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6:44 - 6:48and suffered equal horrific punishments.
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6:48 - 6:55But African slavery could be transferred from generation to generation.
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6:55 - 6:57If you were an African slave,
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6:57 - 6:59who'd been brought over to Barbados
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6:59 - 7:01and you had children,
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7:01 - 7:04your child would have been born into slavery.
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7:04 - 7:06If you were a white endentured servant
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7:06 - 7:10who had been condemned to servitude and you had children on the island,
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7:10 - 7:12they were born free.
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7:12 - 7:15So there is a marked legal distinction.
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7:19 - 7:22There is the concept of the "white negro",
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7:22 - 7:25and certainly, you know, in a legal sense they probably were slaves
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7:25 - 7:30because they were innumerated as part of the chattals,
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7:30 - 7:36in other words the property of the individual, ehm, who held their indentures.
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7:36 - 7:39So in that sense, you know, they were no different legally from black slaves.
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7:42 - 7:45[narrator] Despite Scotland being a rich source of indentured labour,
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7:45 - 7:49demand on the island outstripped supply.
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7:49 - 7:51But there was a solution.
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7:51 - 7:53War. [/narrator]
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7:54 - 7:56Things were taking a dramatic turn
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7:56 - 8:02when Oliver Cromwell invaded Scotland at the Battle of Dunbar.
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8:02 - 8:07On one hand the Hays lose control of the island,
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8:07 - 8:11on the other hand, there's a new supply of labour,
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8:11 - 8:13prisoners of war.
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8:16 - 8:19The ultimate answer is to transport them,
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8:19 - 8:21and Barbados is where they're sent.
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8:28 - 8:30Here we are in Greyfriars Graveyard,
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8:30 - 8:32and this is really where it all happened.
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8:32 - 8:34This is the trigger zone for, eh,
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8:34 - 8:37which will ricochet all the way to Barbados,
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8:37 - 8:43because it's here that youre dissenting, eh, senior leaders
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8:43 - 8:47of the Scottish rebellion against the king, Charles 1,
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8:47 - 8:53come into this graveyard and sign a massive document called the National Covenant,
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8:53 - 9:00which binds them to resist Charles' ideas about imposing Episcopalianism,
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9:00 - 9:04the Church of England's style of bishops etc on Presbyterian Scotland,
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9:04 - 9:09and by doing so, we start this great conflict.
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9:09 - 9:14So you can really claim that the English Civil War was actually triggered from here,
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9:14 - 9:16and cascades down south, and to Ireland.
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9:18 - 9:20The monument we're walking towards now,
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9:20 - 9:24is possibly the most emotive part of that killing time,
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9:24 - 9:32before it goes on, and all these prisoners were sent off as slaves.
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9:32 - 9:34Barbado'd.
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9:35 - 9:36And here we have it.
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9:39 - 9:43Being Barbados'd was equivalent to being transported,
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9:43 - 9:47ehm, you've got to remember the fact that these were not idyllic islands in that period,
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9:47 - 9:50these were lethal areas with very high death rates,
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9:50 - 9:52especially for Europeans,
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9:52 - 9:55and especially through yellow fever.
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9:55 - 10:01[narrator] So this is where the covenanters were held before being shipped off. [/narrator]
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10:01 - 10:03Some were here for up to two years.
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10:03 - 10:05[narrator] So they're locked in here,
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10:05 - 10:06are they fed and watered and covered?[/narrator]
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10:06 - 10:09Barely, no cover.
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10:09 - 10:14They're not dying here, but the survivors were all marched off and sold,
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10:14 - 10:17some of them would have appeared in Barbados,
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10:17 - 10:19because the market was strong there.
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10:19 - 10:25[narrator] But therefore the people who are finally indentured and sent to the colonies,
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10:25 - 10:28arrive here in pretty bad state in the first place.
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10:28 - 10:30If they've been held out here for two years,
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10:30 - 10:32and after a war,
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10:32 - 10:35they're not arriving in Barbados really full of strength and very well fed. [/narrator]
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10:35 - 10:37I don't think they would have fetched much.
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10:37 - 10:41And knowing the state of vittles on both ships as I do,
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10:41 - 10:45I think most of them didn't made the passage to be honest.
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10:46 - 10:47A great tragedy.
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10:54 - 10:56[narrator] Transportees were shackled and kept below deck
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10:56 - 11:00in a voyage that lasted anything from 8 to 10 weeks.
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11:00 - 11:05Conditions were so bad that many of them died long before they reached the Caribbean.
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11:05 - 11:08There are no records of how traders treated their Scottish cargo,
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11:08 - 11:11but we do know what they would have faced on arrival,
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11:11 - 11:15thanks to the writings of visitors the island like Richard Ligon,
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11:15 - 11:21who published a true and exact history of the island of Barbados in 1657.
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11:25 - 11:29Professor Fred Smith, of William and Mary University on Virginia,
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11:29 - 11:32is on an archeological dig in Barbados.
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11:32 - 11:34Fred's students tried to imagine what life must have been like
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11:34 - 11:38for those early arrivals who had to build their own shelters.
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11:38 - 11:41Richard Ligon paints a vivid picture of those difficult days:
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11:43 - 11:45"Upon the arrival of any ship
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11:45 - 11:46the planters go aboard
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11:46 - 11:48and having bought such of them as they like,
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11:48 - 11:51send them with a guide to his plantation,
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11:51 - 11:54and being come, commands them instantly to make their cabins,
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11:54 - 11:56which they not knowing how to do,
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11:56 - 12:01are to be advised by other of their servants that are their seniors.
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12:01 - 12:03But if they be churlish and will not show them,
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12:03 - 12:05or if material be wanting to make them cabins,
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12:05 - 12:09then they are to lay on the ground that night.
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12:09 - 12:12These cabins are to be made of sticks with some plantain leaves,
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12:12 - 12:16under some little shade that may keep the rain off.
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12:17 - 12:22Their supper being a few potatoes and water and __ for drink,
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12:22 - 12:26the next day they are rung our with a bell to work at 6 o'clock in the morning,
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12:26 - 12:28til the bell ring again,
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12:28 - 12:29which is at 11 o'clock,
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12:29 - 12:31and then they return and are sent to dinner
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12:31 - 12:34and then they return and are set to dinner,
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12:34 - 12:36either with a mess of , , or potatoes."
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12:38 - 12:42Professor Carl Watson is a decendant of the first immigrants to Barbados,
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12:42 - 12:45and a leading historian of the island's poor whites.
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12:46 - 12:48Well history has two levels.
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12:48 - 12:52History seen from above, from the point of view of the powerful;
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12:52 - 12:54and history seen from below.
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12:54 - 12:59And usually those from below were either illiterate and hence left no written records
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12:59 -of their daily lives...
- Title:
- Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4
- Description:
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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
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Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project edited English subtitles for Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves part 1 of 4 | |
![]() |
Radical Access Mapping Project added a translation |