zealous and celebrated a champion of slavery.
We were received with marked courtesy by Mr. B., who
constrained us to spend a day and night with him at
his seat at Fairfield. One of the first objects
that met our eye in Mr. B.’s dining hall was
a splendid piece of silver plate, which was presented
to him by the planters of St. Thomas in the East,
in consideration of his able defence of colonial slavery.
We were favorably impressed with Mr. B.’s intelligence,
and somewhat so with his present sentiments respecting
slavery. We gathered from him that he had resisted
with all his might the anti-slavery measures of the
English government, and exerted every power to prevent
the introduction of the apprenticeship system.
After he saw that slavery would inevitably be abolished,
he drew up at length a plan of emancipation according
to which the condition of the slave was to be commuted
into that of the old English
villein—he
was to be made an appendage to
the soil instead
of the “chattel personal” of the master,
the whip was to be partially abolished, a modicum
of wages was to be allowed the slave, and so on.
There was to be no fixed period when this system would
terminate, but it was to fade gradually and imperceptibly
into entire freedom. He presented a copy of his
scheme to the then governor, the Earl of Mulgrave,
requesting that it might be forwarded to the home
government. Mr. B. said that the anti-slavery
party in England had acted from the blind impulses
of religious fanaticism, and had precipitated to its
issue a work which required many years of silent preparation
in order to its safe accomplishment. He intimated
that the management of abolition ought to have been
left with the colonists; they had been the long experienced
managers of slavery, and they were the only men qualified
to superintend its burial, and give it a decent interment.
He did not think that the apprenticeship afforded
any clue to the dark mystery of 1840. Apprenticeship
was so inconsiderably different from slavery, that
it furnished no more satisfactory data for judging
of the results of entire freedom than slavery itself.
Neither would he consent to be comforted by the actual
results of emancipation in Antigua.
Taking leave of Mr. Barclay, we returned to the Plantain
Garden River Valley, and called at the Golden Grove,
one of the most splendid estates in that magnificent
district. This is an estate of two thousand acres;
it has five hundred apprentices and one hundred free
children. The average annual crop is six hundred
hogsheads of sugar. Thomas McCornock, Esq., the
attorney of this estate, is the custos, or chief magistrate
of the parish, and colonel of the parish militia.
There is no man in all the parish of greater consequence,
either in fact or in seeming self-estimation, than
Thomas McCornock, Esq. He is a Scotchman, as is
also Mr. Barclay. The custos received us with
as much freedom as the dignity of his numerous offices