A few days ago, quite by chance, I came across a project being conducted by University College London and was somewhat taken aback to find the following entry in the database
UCL Legacies of British Slave-ownership
I did a bit more research and discovered a number of references to Gray, Whitworth and Gilbee and their connection to the slave trade.
Manuscript Sources for the History of the West Indies 1776
A Picturesque Tour of the Island of Jamaica
Register of British and Foreign Shipping
And also entries in the Slave Registries from 1817 until about 1832
The partnership was dissolved in 1829 but Gray still continued his involvement until he was compensated in 1835.
Tags for Forum Posts: harringay house
Hi Yvonne, glad to see you have joined HoL!
The Slave Registers can be found on the Ancestry.co.uk website. Go to the Card Catalogue and then enter Jamaica as the keyword. Jamaicanfamilysearch.com also has lots of info.
No, Yvonne, certainly not a pittance at all. I'm just tickled that, in my earlier comment on Angela's original post, my fantasy joining of the dots on Edward Gray's life and times turns out to be not so fantastic after all.
Perhaps it's time you came over to Harringay Ladder to stake your claim to Harringay House site, if not all of Harringay Park. You may be the rightful owner of a chunk of Hewitt and Allison Roads at least. Hugh is already consulting his lawyers, just in case!
Bugger the lawyers. I'm on my hotline to the mob.
Well as a relatively new resident of Haringey I would at least like a walking tour of the areas the labour of my descendants helped purchase and create! And then I will have a better sense of the potential scale of any claim! Given how many slaves Gray was compensated for, there will be I suspect be quite a few of us!!
Meet at Fairland Park on Sunday at 9:30 for a "walking" tour of the ladder. £5.
Hi John, thanks for the offer. I am busy this Sunday but should be free next weekend. How much time should I put aside?
Oh I was being cheeky. See here. :)
OK folks, here's some light reading for the weekend. One completed transcription of Edward Gray's Last Will and Testament.
A couple of things to note about this:
I've done my best with this and I think it is pretty accurate, but please note I am not a professional transcriber - if anyone thinks I've got anything wrong in it or has any suggestions to make it better (in particular if you can work out the surname of George, Gray's butler which is, I think, the only word I couldn't decipher), then please let me know.
Finally, while I am not a professional transcriber, I have to admit that, for my sins, I am a lawyer, so I have to make the obligatory disclaimer noises about the transcription not being legal advice and how you should all seek independent advice about your wills rather than copying this one.
Enjoy!
My goodness - great work!
pdf version attached
Bethany, I've only had a quick look at the transcription but just wanted to say thanks, you are an absolute star!
Now I see why I've avoided making my Last Will & Testament for years. My Harringay estates, my overseas plantations, several hundred House and Field slaves, and my graspingly expectant family will drown me in several score foolscap folios of legalese.
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