
audiobook
A vivid portrait of the British West Indies before emancipation, this work uncovers the tangled economics that kept the sugar colonies afloat while draining both masters and the enslaved. Drawing on parliamentary reports, missionary testimonies, and meticulous estate records, the author shows how monopolistic trade, absentee ownership, and a costly bureaucracy of managers, overseers and attorneys left plantations perpetually in debt. The narrative also highlights the stark contrast between the wealth extracted for British consumers and the meager, often brutal, conditions endured by the laborers who produced it.
Beyond the numbers, the book asks what “prosperity” truly means for a community when one class bears the full weight of another’s gain. By tracing the mounting financial pressures on planters and the early cries of ruin—long before abolition—readers gain a nuanced understanding of why the push for emancipation grew inevitable. The first act sets the stage for a deeper examination of how the “right way” to rebuild might be found through inclusive, equitable policies.
Full title
The Right Way the Safe Way Proved by Emancipation in the British West Indies, and Elsewhere
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (237K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Suzanne Shell, 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/American Libraries.)
Release date
2015-09-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.