Skip to content

Slavery, Exploitation and Trade in the West Indies, 1759-1832

  • Home
  • Collections
  • Slavery, Exploitation and Trade in the West Indies, 1759-1832
An engraving of The Mill Yard, grinding sugar cane in a windmill in 1823. A windmill on the left hand side, with people and cattle working.

The papers of Nathaniel Phillips from the Slebech Estate collection

An important archival resource for the history of West Indian trade and plantations during the slavery era, these Jamaica-related documents cover the period from the Seven Years' War through to the end of the Napoleonic wars.
Professor Kenneth Morgan, Brunel University

Access the full collection

Get full access to Slavery, Exploitation and Trade in the West Indies, 1759-1832.

Institutional Free Trial

Sign up for a FREE trial 

Single User License

Purchase a license below to view the full collection.

Already have a license? Sign in to view the collection

Plantation slavery in Jamaica

During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Jamaica was the largest and most profitable island in Britain's West Indian plantation economy. An estimated one million enslaved Africans were forcibly shipped there to work on the island's plantations, from which sugar was the main export. In 1759 Nathaniel Phillips of Slebech in Pembrokeshire moved to Jamaica. In 1761 he bought half of the Pleasant Hill plantation. During his time on the island he acquired four plantations and owned hundreds of enslaved people. Phillips’ papers form part of the Slebech Estate records held at the National Library of Wales. They provide numerous, albeit unsettling, insights into the history of slavery in Jamaica.

The documents in this collection date from 1759 to 1832. They cover Phillips' arrival in Jamaica, his purchase of Pleasant Hill, his return to England as an absentee plantation owner in 1789, his death in 1813, and the subsequent division of his assets between his family. The collection contains a wealth of information regarding his financial activities in the West Indies and, importantly, the documents shed light on the experiences of enslaved people on his plantations. You will also find financial documents, correspondence relating to the management of Phillips’ estates in Britain, legal documents, and diaries. In addition, the collection features correspondence revealing Phillips’ fears — shared by his fellow plantation owners — of potential insurrections by enslaved people. Some letters likewise find him reflecting upon the impact of the Haitian revolution which began in 1791 — a successful revolt by self-liberated enslaved people against French colonial rule in St. Domingue.

Slavery, Exploitation, and Trade in the West Indies, 1759–1832 is a rich resource for students and researchers wishing to explore the history of transatlantic slavery, in the development of the British empire. It will also appeal to those interested in the broader, social history of, and relationship between, Britain and the West Indies.

Contents

Slavery, Exploitation and Trade in the West Indies, 1759-1832...

The papers of Nathaniel Phillips from the Slebech Estate collection

Volumes & Documents 
Sugar production in the West Indies in the 17th century used an evaporating furnace (pictured left), grinding mill driven by oxen (right), dwellings (lower right), and a large plantation house (upper right).

Highlights

Licensed to access Reports, March 1791

This document includes reports of meetings held in London by the Society of West India Merchants and Planters. These sources reveal concerns about the uprising of enslaved Africans in the French colony of St. Domingue and how this might impact British colonies.

Licensed to access Business records, 1789–1812

This document of plantation lists, ledgers, and accounts includes registers of people enslaved on Phillips’ estates. Their names, ages, occupations, and brief details about their health are recorded, alongside lists of births and deaths.

Licensed to access Letters, 1760–1767

These letters between Phillips and the London merchants Hilton & Biscoe illuminate the importance of the sugar and rum trades within Britain’s plantation economy.

Licensed to access Letters, 1896–1800

After Phillips returned to Britain, some of his estates were run by Thomas Barritt. His letters to Phillips give us a sense of the day to day management of a sugar plantation, including relationships and negotiations with enslaved workers.

Insights

  • Jamaica was the most profitable island in Britain's plantation economy. Its main export was sugar, a commodity much desired in Europe, which was cultivated by enslaved workers.

  • Nathaniel Phillips was the illegitimate son of a sugar merchant, Nathaniel Phillips Snr., who was based in Mile End, London.

  • This collection is an important resource for the study of the business of slavery. It includes extensive correspondence between Nathaniel Phillips and other London merchants implicated in transatlantic slavery, such as John Purrier and Thomas Hibbert.

  • The plantation records include registers of people enslaved on Phillips' estates, including their names, ages, and other brief details about their lives.

  • The records in this collection illuminate the inner workings of Jamaican plantations. Intriguingly, these sources evidence the anxieties felt by owners of enslaved people owing to the threat of possible uprisings.

Licensed to access Slavery Through Time: from Enslavers to Abolitionists, 1675-1865

1675   1865

Licensed to access Slave Trading Records from William Davenport & Co., 1745-1797

1745   1797

Licensed to access Slave Trade Records from Liverpool, 1754-1792

1754   1811

Licensed to access Scottish Trade with Africa and the West Indies in the Early 18th century, 1694-1709

1694   1709
Back to Top