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Slavery
-01 Background to the Research
-01a Brief History of Emancipation
-02a A Brief Background to The Turks and Caicos Islands
-02b Depopulation of the Turks and Caicos Islands
-02c The Bermudans And The Salt Industry
-02d The Loyalist Period
-02d1 Chesire Hall Plantation
-02d2 Wades Green Plantation
-02d3 Haulover Plantation
-03 Runaway Slaves
-04 Emancipation and Beyond
-05 Slave Ships
-06 Sources of Slaves
-07 Biased Recording
-08 Slave Records of 1822 to 1834
-09 Religion & Religious Records
-10 Punishment
-11 Conclusion
-12 Bibliography and related Material
-Liberated Africans
-Plantations
-Recent Finding
Slavery And Emancipation Birth Of The Caribbean Conference
Space Race
Stamps
Timeline
Trouvadore Slave Ship
Trustees
Search
02b Depopulation of the Turks and Caicos Islands
One cannot forget that the early History of these Islands revolves around Slavery. Not the African slave trade that preoccupies most slave research, but that of the early Spanish explorers. In 1492 Christopher Columbus “discovered” the new world, but in the Bahamian archipelago he failed to find the wealth he was seeking. What he did find though were the Lucayans, a peaceful people who were easily enslaved and shipped to work in the mines of Hispaniola. It is possible that the ship found wrecked on the Molasses Reef was taking part in this trade. The enslavement and the introduction of new European diseases saw the complete eradication of the Lucayans by around 1520.

This now left a chain of Islands devoid of people. Any future developments would require the immigration of all the manual workers.




Contents of this story:
Turks and Caicos National Museum
Nigel Sadler

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