Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar Barons: The Last Stand of the Black Caribs on St. Vincent
African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter
Volume 10
Issue 1 March 2007
Article 7
3-1-2007
Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar
Barons: The Last Stand of the Black Caribs on St.
Vincent
James L. Sweeney
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Recommended Citation
Sweeney, James L. (2007) "Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar Barons: The Last Stand of the Black Caribs on St. Vincent,"
African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter: Vol. 10 : Iss. 1 , Article 7.
Available at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/adan/vol10/iss1/7
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Sweeney: Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar Barons: The Last S
March 2007 Newsletter
Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar Barons:
The Last Stand of the Black Caribs on St. Vincent
By James L. Sweeney [1]
Perhaps the one of the most important historic events in Eastern Caribbean history and
also one of the most fascinating was the defeat and exile of the last independent indigenous
group in those islands, the Black Caribs, by the British in the Second Carib War, 1795-1796.
This war was part of a regional conflict between the French islanders and their allies against the
British, called the War of the Brigands. This regional war was in turn a part of the larger conflict
between the British and Revolutionary France.
For France the conflict in the Eastern Caribbean was a sideshow that helped divert British
power from the main conflict in Europe. For the French settlers and Caribs on St. Vincent, who
sought to expel the British from their island, it was a fight for survival. For the British Empire
the goal of the conflict was to expand and secure British power in the Caribbean, defeat their
French rivals for empire, and counter the values of the French Revolution. The more parochial
goals of the English planters on St. Vincent were to defend their plantations and the capital of
Kingstown from marauding French and Carib attackers, who were seeking to push them off the
island, and to then defeat them and expel the Black Caribs from the prime sugar cane growing
lands that they still held.
The general outline of Vincentian history is consistent with the history of the Western
Hemisphere and much of the rest of the world that was controlled by European colonial powers.
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African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter, Vol. 10 [2007], Iss. 1, Art. 7
It follows with a succession of indigenous groups, colonization and conquest by Europeans, the
introduction of new population, indigenous resistance, removal, extermination, or depopulation
of the indigenous groups, conflict between rival colonial powers, and eventual control by one
power. After long tenure the greatly altered society is then granted autonomy and independence
in the late 20th century, but the lasting effects of colonialization linger.
While the history of St. Vincent follows the general pattern of colonial history for the
region, and for similar territories world wide, it does have its unique aspects. Among these is the
prolonged resistance of the indigenous inhabitants, the Caribs, to occupation by the European
powers. The Caribs were among the most successful Native American groups in resisting
conquest. Their last strongholds in the Eastern Caribbean were on Dominica and St. Vincent.
St. Vincent was the last of the Windward Islands to be totally subjugated. This was not
accomplished until 1797. By contrast other islands, such as Barbados and St. Kitts, were settled,
and successfully controlled nearly a hundred and fifty years earlier by the British (“Caribbean
Time Line”).
Another unique aspect of St. Vincent’s history was that the first important contact
between the indigenous Caribs and the Old World was not with Europeans, but rather with
Africans. African refugees came largely from slave ships that wrecked on the reefs or as
escapees by boat and raft from the slave islands of St. Lucia and Barbados to St. Vincent and the
nearby Grenadine Islands. Others were captured in raids on the European held islands or
purchased as slaves by the Caribs. These people intermarried with the Caribs, and adopted their
culture. Eventually the resulting Black Carib group developed out of this blending of African
and Carib cultures. With the continuing migration of escaped slaves to St. Vincent the
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Sweeney: Caribs, Maroons, Jacobins, Brigands, and Sugar Barons: The Last S
population that was of mixed ancestry eventually predominated. These were the people who
eventually led the final resistance to the British takeover of their island in 1796.
The difficulty of putting down the resistance of first the Caribs, and later the Black Caribs
meant that St. Vincent was one of the last of the Lesser Antilles to become part of the Sugar
Empire that dominated the Caribbean economy for nearly two hundred years, and was a great
source of wealth for the colonial nations of Europe. The slowness of the introduction of the
sugar plantation economy to St. Vincent meant that large-scale slavery was also late in being
introduced into the islands. This did not occur until the sugar lands controlled by the Black
Caribs were taken over after the last Carib War ended in 1797. As slavery was abolished in St.
Vincent in 1832, large-scale production of sugar on plantations by large numbers of African
slaves was a phenomenon that lasted just over a generation on St. Vincent.
Caribs
The best known of the indigenous groups that once occupied St. Vincent and the
Grenadines are the Caribs. These people arrived about 1200 AD from the mainland according to
carbon 14 dating (de Silva xv). They moved up the island chain from the mainland as far as
Eastern Puerto Rico, displacing, exterminating, and incorporating the Arawak population. They
had a tradition of war and raiding, especially for women. The origins of their drive into the
islands from the mainland may have been similar to their predecessors, the Siboney and
Arawaks, but the French missionary, Fr. Adrien Le Breton, who lived among them from 1693
until 1702 recounts an oral history told to him by Caribs that explains the tradition of why they
left the mainland to conquer the islands of the Lesser Antilles. According to the story the Caribs
had been slaves or subjects of mainland Arawaks, and had been freed in the 11th Century. From
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African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter, Vol. 10 [2007], Iss. 1, Art. 7
that point they had spread into the Caribbean, driving out or incorporating the island Arawaks
already there (de Silva xix).
The term Carib was not originally used to designate the peo (...truncated)