The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

COMMUNICATION FROM CAPT.  HAMILTON.

Barbadoes, April 4th, 1837.

Gentlemen,

Presuming that you have kept a copy of the questions[A] you sent me, I shall therefore only send the answers.

[Footnote A:  The same interrogatories were propounded to Capt.  Hamilton which have been already inserted in Major Colthurst’s communication.]

1.  There are at present five thousand nine hundred and thirty male, and six thousand six hundred and eighty-nine female apprentices in my district, (B,) which comprises a part of the parishes of Christ Church and St. George.  Their conduct, compared with the neighboring districts, is good.

2.  The state of agriculture is very flourishing.  Experienced planters acknowledge that it is generally far superior to what it was during slavery.

3.  Where the managers are kind and temperate, they have not any trouble with the laborers.

4.  The apprentices are generally willing to work for wages in their own time.

5.  The average number of complaints tried by me, last year, ending December, was one thousand nine hundred and thirty-two.  The average number of apprentices in the district during that time was twelve thousand seven hundred.  Offences, generally speaking, are not of any magnitude.  They do not increase, but fluctuate according to the season of the year.

6.  The state of crime is not so bad by any means as we might have expected among the negroes—­just released from such a degrading bondage.  Considering the state of ignorance in which they have been kept, and the immoral examples set them by the lower class of whites, it is matter of astonishment that they should behave so well.

7.  The apprentices would have a great respect for law, were it not for the erroneous proceedings of the managers, overseers, &c., in taking them before the magistrates for every petty offence, and often abusing the magistrate in the presence of the apprentices, when his decision does not please them.  The consequence is, that the apprentices too often get indifferent to law, and have been known to say that they cared not about going to prison, and that they would do just as they did before as soon as they were released.

8.  The apprentices in this colony are generally considered a peaceable race.  All acts of revenge committed by them originate in jealousy, as, for instance, between husband and wife.

9.  Not the slightest sense of insecurity.  As a proof of this, property has, since the commencement of the apprenticeship, increased in value considerably—­at least one third.

10.  The change which will take place in 1838, in my opinion, will occasion a great deal of discontent among those called praedials—­which will not subside for some months.  They ought to have been all emancipated at the same period.  I cannot foresee any bad effects that will ensue from the change in 1840, except those mentioned hereafter.

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.