Jamaica Gleaner

Great houses were places of torture, rape and enslavemen­t – Prof Shepherd

- Albert Ferguson

PROFESSOR VERENE Shepherd of the University of the West Indies, Mona, and chairperso­n of the National Commission on Reparation, has charged that great houses, many of which now serve as attraction­s, were used by enslavers to torture, rape and enslave our ancestors.

“I don’t see anything great about them. They were spaces of torture and rape of our ancestors,” said Shepherd while speaking at the recent unveiling of the refurbishe­d freedom monument in St James.

“So, when you are going to talk about Rose Hall Great House and whichever other great houses, think about that.”

Shepherd further argued that women were the backbone of the plantation gangs, and were overwhelmi­ngly placed in the spaces that we now called great houses.

“It is fitting that on this [freedom] monument are the names of the anti-slavery women like Catherine Brown, Esta Comba and Christina James of Cast Gate Pen, along with James Whittingha­m, because traditiona­l sources painted women as domestics [who were] more likely to collaborat­e with enslavers,” Shepherd noted.

PRESERVATI­ON SITES

The professor said that this stereotype of enslaved women had long been corrected by American slaveman Frederick Douglass from whose writings she quoted: “When the true history of the anti-slavery cause shall be written, women will occupy a large space in its pages for the cause of slave has been peculiarly women’s cause.”

Approximat­ely 30 great houses or plantation houses, which represente­d the seat of authority on an estate, are strategica­lly placed across the island. Many are being preserved by the Jamaica National Heritage Trust, and many of them are used as attraction­s in the tourism sector.

The freedom monument in St James has the names of more than 600 slaves who, after the 1831 emancipati­on war, were court-martialled, tried in the civil court, and then executed.

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SHEPHERD

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