Cornwall Estate

The Cornwall estate was often associated economically and in ownership with the nearby Cinnamon Hill estate and great house, both being bequeathed to Samuel Moulton Barrett (paternal uncle of Elizabeth Barrett Browning) upon his 21st birthday and then sold together in 1878 to George Robertson. Lacking a great house, Cornwall was comparatively smaller than its Cinnamon Hill counterpart and produced sugar, rum, and, occasionally, cattle. Its population of enslaved laborers was smaller, as well, rarely exceeding 200 people.

Coordinates

Latitude: 18.501160000000
Longitude: -77.803110000000

Timeline of Events Associated with Cornwall Estate

Date Event Manage
25 Dec 1831 to 5 Jan 1832

The Baptist War

Lasting from Christmas day in 1831 until its eventual suppression on January 5, 1832, the Great Jamaican Slave Revolt was led by Black Baptist preacher Sam Sharpe. The uprising began as a strike centered on demands for increased wages but became violent on December 27th with the burning of the Kensington Estate in Montego Bay. Despite a crucial victory early on due to stockpiled weapons and ammunition, the enslaved workers' cause was weakened when martial law was enacted on December 31st, and the forces surrendered entirely by January 5th. The uprising became one of the largest in the West Indies, involving nearly 60,000 members (or 20%) of the island's enslaved population. By the end of the fight, rebel forces had set fire to over 100 properties. There were no deaths on the side of the colonial military and over 500 on that of the enslaved Jamaicans--207 killed during the revolt and another 310 to 340, including Sharpe, executed afterward. Despite the defeat of the enslaved population, the revolt played a crucial role in furthering abolitionist causes across the British Empire, as seen in the passage of the Slavery Abolition Act in August of the following year.

Adolphe Duperly, The Destruction of Roehampton Estate. 1832 Adolphe Duperly, The Destruction of Roehampton Estate. 1832