
audiobook
by Richard Hildreth, Edward Carbery
INDUCEMENTS
I. SITUATION, EXTENT, GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES, CLIMATE, SOIL AND PRODUCTIONS OF BRITISH GUIANA.
II. FORM OF GOVERNMENT, ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, CIVIL DIVISIONS, POPULATION, SOCIAL EQUALITY.
III. SPECIAL LAWS FOR THE PROTECTION OF LABORERS AND EMIGRANTS.
IV. TAXES, MILITARY DUTY, RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION, EDUCATION.
V. DEMAND FOR LABOR, KINDS OF LABOR, WAGES.
VI. OFFERS MADE TO SUCH FREE COLORED PERSONS OF THE UNITED STATES, AS MAY CHOOSE TO EMIGRATE TO BRITISH GUIANA.
VII. DIRECTIONS TO PERSONS WISHING TO EMIGRATE.
APPENDIX.
A vivid portrait of British Guiana unfolds in this mid‑nineteenth‑century guide, inviting readers to imagine a tropical land of rolling hills, fertile river valleys and endless coastlines. Detailed maps of the Essequebo, Demerara and Berbice rivers illustrate a landscape where sugar, coffee and a bounty of vegetables thrive without the need for artificial fertilizers, while the gentle trade winds keep the climate warm yet comfortable year‑round.
Beyond the geography, the pamphlet explains the colony’s governance as a British crown possession, outlining the role of a governor appointed by the queen and the legal framework imported from England. It emphasizes the abundance of cheap beef, timber, and the potential for new settlements along the cultivated coastal strip, suggesting a promising future for those seeking a fresh start.
Presented as a friendly appeal to African Americans, the work balances practical information about soil, climate and social structure with an optimistic vision of opportunity, inviting listeners to consider a life beyond the familiar shores of the United States.
Language
en
Duration
~40 minutes (38K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by hekula03, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2019-01-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1807–1865
A sharp-eyed 19th-century journalist and historian, he brought the American past to life with unusual candor and a reformer's sense of urgency. His writing ranges from sweeping national history to fiction shaped by strong antislavery convictions.
View all booksKnown today for an 1840 pamphlet on emigration to British Guiana, this little-documented figure appears in the historical record as a landowner and promoter tied to early post-abolition Guyana. His surviving work offers a revealing window into race, migration, and colonial ambition in the Atlantic world.
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