2019
DOI: 10.15362/ijbs.v25i0.343
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Slave-owners’ Compensation: The Bahamas Colony

Abstract: This study uses descriptive statistics to provide an overview of the compensation received by former slave-owners who were compensated for the loss of their property in the Bahamas colony, that is, their slaves, after Emancipation. The data used for this study is from the University College London's Legacies of British Slave-ownership Centre. This paper answers four questions: What was the amount of the compensation received by former slave-owners in the Bahamas colony in 1834? What was the distribution of the… Show more

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“…Basing their appeals on the twin pillars of "rights to self-legislation and…property rights in their slaves," the White elite resisted changes to the existing system of bondage and campaigned at Westminster for favourable terms when it became clear that emancipation was only a matter of time and negotiation (Craton & Saunders, 1992, p. 221). Indeed, when slavery was officially abolished in 1834, former slaveowners were handsomely compensated and a period of apprenticeship was imposed upon the Black population of the British West Indies for a variable number of years (Saunders, 2019). In The Bahamas, that number was four.…”
Section: Many Of the Loyalists Emigrated Frommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Basing their appeals on the twin pillars of "rights to self-legislation and…property rights in their slaves," the White elite resisted changes to the existing system of bondage and campaigned at Westminster for favourable terms when it became clear that emancipation was only a matter of time and negotiation (Craton & Saunders, 1992, p. 221). Indeed, when slavery was officially abolished in 1834, former slaveowners were handsomely compensated and a period of apprenticeship was imposed upon the Black population of the British West Indies for a variable number of years (Saunders, 2019). In The Bahamas, that number was four.…”
Section: Many Of the Loyalists Emigrated Frommentioning
confidence: 99%