Galway's Estate papers, 1782-1835 (majority within 1790-1809)
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Neave family
- Abstract:
- The Galway's Estate Papers consists of approximately 45 letters, 104 documents, and a handful of letter covers and wrappers produced between 1782 and 1835, relating to the sugar plantation in Montserrat that was owned by James Neave and his descendants. The collection documents the financial affairs of the plantation, absentee management operations from England, sugar production and trade, and tracking the labor of the approximately 150-160 enslaved workers.
- Extent:
- 0.5 linear feet
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Jayne Ptolemy, November 2023
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Galway's Estate Papers consists of approximately 45 letters, 104 documents, and a handful of letter covers and wrappers produced between 1782 and 1835, relating to the sugar plantation in Montserrat that was owned by James Neave and his descendants. The collection documents the financial affairs of the plantation, absentee management operations from England, sugar production and trade, and tracking the labor of the approximately 150-160 enslaved workers.
The bulk of the Correspondence Series consists of letters written from Montserrat to James Neave in Nunton, England, and after Neave's death from various correspondents in England to John Thomas Batt, his son-in-law. Much of the correspondence relates to the management of the plantation with details on weather, crops, fertilization efforts, managing livestock, work on buildings and infrastructure, notes on provisions, sugar sales, and other plantation and financial affairs. Many of the letters were written by two attorneys hired by James Neave in Montserrat, Alexander Hood and Richard McNamera. John Willett, another Englishman who spent time living in Montserrat, wrote to Neave applauding his choice to have two attorneys helping to oversee his estate, noting "every man here is for himself & they would take the Teeth out of your head if they could" (May 30, 1793). In addition to relying on attorneys and managers in Montserrat, both Neave and Batt employed merchant firms to help manage shipments and sales of sugar.
Other letters provide insight into Montserrat's social world, such as advice to send the manager of the plantation, Daniel Allers, a better fowling piece and saddle as "these little articles have more effect in that Country than you can conceive and you will be sure to be repaid by their assiduity on acco[un]t of such attention" (September 20, 1794). Advisement to provide Allers with annual gifts and salary raises continued following the passage of the estate to John Thomas Batt (March 1795). A copy of a letter from Thomas Cannonier, another manager of Galway's Estate, disputed his removal from the position and having the position given "to a Mulatto Man of the name of Jack Skerrett . . . my living depends upon my character, and when a Business is taken from a Young Man in this way, it casts a blot upon him" (May 17, 1804).
The letters track difficulties encountered on the plantation, such as drought, crop failures, damage by pests like sugarcane borer and rats, as well as challenges with attempts to produce coffee and secure transport of sugar crops. Mentions of enslaved workers include commentary on "Incurables" and their cost to the estate (January 15, 1791), enslaved people's refusal to accept spoiled provisions (July 21, 1790; March 20, 1793), and the "excitement prevailing generally among the negroes on the subject of emancipation" that were impacting decisions to ship clothing (October 30, 1833).
Several letters reference international concerns, including matters relating to the War of the First Coalition. Writers noted fear of conflict with France and Spain (July 12, 1790), Charles Grey's capture of Martinique (March 3, 1794), the presence of Admiral Gardner in the region (May 30, 1793), the impact of captured ships and fears of war with America (July 26, 1794), the presence of the French near Guadeloupe (September 20, 1794), and captured stores (July 3, 1804). Other letters commented on the island resident's sense of isolation and their excitement over receiving European newspapers and magazines (January 15, 1791; October 13, 1791; July 21, 1793).
The later letters in the collection date from the 1820s and 1830s and reference efforts to transfer management of Galway's Estate to the firm of Manning & Anderson and their subsequent communications on the plantation.
The Documents Series includes documentation of sugar sales, receipts, annual plantation accounts, enumerated lists of enslaved workers and livestock, among other items. Several accounts list the entirety of the enslaved population on Galway's Estate by first name, occasionally providing valuations, indication of where individuals labored, who was superannuated, and numbers of deaths and births. In a few instances disabilities or accommodations are suggested (e.g. blind, "wh. one leg," "does not work being the Mother of Nine Children").
Twenty two partially printed weekly accounts of the plantation were filled out by the plantation manager Daniel Allers between July 3, 1796, and October 14, 1797. They list out the numbers of enslaved workers, their distribution doing various tasks, the numbers who were sick, as well as accounts of livestock, weather, shipments, and other occurrences. Allers noted any additional days "given" to the enslaved workers to "work their Grounds" or "plant provisions." He also generally described the agricultural tasks being accomplished, such as weeding or holing, and recorded deaths of enslaved people and livestock. On August 9, 1796, Allers noted the death of a boy "from no other complaint but by eating dirt," and in August and September 1797 he noted that five were sick from "Sores & Yaws."
Other invoices list "sundry stores" shipped to or needed in Montserrat, including provisions, tools, seeds, cloth, and other goods, while other annual accounts list out general expenses incurred at the plantation, including work on outbuildings, "Madeira Wine used for sick Negroes when in small pox" (April 1, 1793), inoculations, salary and wages, taxes, and more. Additional financial documents include annual accounts for the disposal of the plantation's sugar, providing a broad overview of the income generated by the plantation. Several documents relating to handling the administration of James Neave's estate following his death are also present, as well as a draft of a lease from 1829 and a list of "Usual Clauses of a West India Lease."
- Biographical / Historical:
-
David Galway, born in Ireland, established a sugar works in southwest Montserrat in the 1660s on a site that would later be known as Galway's Estate, relying on the labor of both Irish and enslaved workers. In 1765 what property was still held by the Galways was leased to Henry and John Dyer, who received a loan from the London firm Neave and Willet to fund the relocation of the sugar works to location further upland and to construct additional out buildings and infrastructure. In 1775 the Dyers relinquished the title to the Galway's Estate to James Neave of Nunton, England (d. 1794). While under his ownership, the plantation depended on the labor of approximately 150 enslaved workers.
The estate passed to his daughter, Susan Neave, who married the lawyer John Thomas Batt (1746-1831) in 1794. The property was held by members of the Neave family until 1836.
- Acquisition Information:
- 2022. M-7986 .
- Arrangement:
-
The collection is arranged chronologically in the following series:
- Correspondence
- Documents
- Oversize Letters and Documents
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Related Materials
John Thomas Batt Papers, 1772-1808. Link to John Thomas Batt Papers Finding Aid.
Bibliography
Pulsipher, Lydia M., and Conrad Goodwin. "'Getting the Essence of It': Galways Plantation, Montserrat, West Indies." In Island Lives: Historical Archaeologies of the Caribbean, edited by Paul Farnsworth, 165-203. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2001.
'Susan Batt (née Neave)', Legacies of British Slavery database, http://wwwdepts-live.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/view/25080 [accessed 20th November 2023].
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
English West Indian Expedition, 1793-1794.
First Coalition, War of the, 1792-1797.
Plantations--Montserrat--Management.
Plantation life--Montserrat.
Plantation owners--England.
Slavery--Montserrat--History--19th century.
Slaves--Montserrat.
Sugar--Manufacture and refining.
Sugar plantations--Montserrat.
Sugar trade--Montserrat.
Sugarcane borer. - Formats:
-
Accounts.
Financial records.
Inventories.
Invoices.
Leases.
Letters (correspondence)
Lists (document genres)
Receipts (financial records) - Names:
-
Batt, John Thomas, 1746-1831.
Aislabie, Benjamin.
Aislabie, Rawson.
Allers, Daniel.
Bosanquet, Samuel.
Hood, Alexander.
Manning, Anderson, & Bosanquet.
Mcade, Thomas.
McNamara, Richard.
Rose, George.
Stanley, John.
Willett, John. - Places:
-
Montserrat--History.
West Indies, British--History.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Galway's Estate Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan