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Jamaica exactHistory in subject [X]
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BOOK

Title:  
The great buccaneer: being the life, death, and extraordinary adventures of Sir Henry Morgan, buccaneer and Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica
Creator:
Lindsay, Philip, 1906-
Publication:
W. Funk, New York, [1951]
Notes:  
Includes bibliographical references (p. 293-294) and index.
Call #:  
B M825L
Extent:
305 p. ; 21 cm.



BOOK

Title:  
List of the Army in Jamaica, 1781
Publication:
Douglass & Aikman, Kingston, Jamaica, 1781].
Notes:  
Excerpted from the Almanack and register for the island of Jamaica: calculated for the year of our Lord 1781...
Call #:  
DLAR VF British Army, Officers
Extent:
9 p.



BOOK

Title:  
List of the Army in Jamaica, 1782
Publication:
Douglass & Aikman, Kingston, Jamaica, 1782].
Notes:  
Excerpted from the Almanack and register for the island of Jamaica: calculated for the year of our Lord 1782...
Call #:  
DLAR VF British Army, Officers
Extent:
[82]-89 p.



BOOK

Title:  
List of the Army in Jamaica, 1783
Publication:
Douglass & Aikman, Kingston, Jamaica, 1783].
Notes:  
Excerpted from the Almanack and register for the island of Jamaica: calculated for the year of our Lord 1783...
Call #:  
DLAR VF British Army, Officers
Extent:
[82]-89 p.



ANALYTIC

Title:  
"The itinerant man": Crèvecoeur's Caribbean, Raynal's revolution, and the fate of Atlantic cosmopolitanism
Parent:
William and Mary quarterly, ser.3, v.61, no.2
Creator:
Iannini, Christopher.
Publication:
Williamsburg, Va, 2004.
Notes:  
Includes bibliographical references.
Call #:  
975.5 W67 SER.3, V.61, NO.2
Extent:
p. [201]-234. ; 24 cm.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1839-1843
Abstract:  

Isaac Jackson managed several estates in northern Jamaica during the years of transition from slavery to free labor. Based in Hanover Parish, County of Cornwall, Jackson oversaw the interests of as many as a dozen estates engaged in the production of sugar and other crops, rum, and cattle during the 1830s and 1840s. Jackson's letterbooks contain approximately 825 letters pertaining to the daily management of Jamaican plantations. Beginning just a year after the end of apprenticeship, the mostly formulaic letters addressed to absentee British landowners, their attorneys, ship captains, and other estate managers touch on sugar and rum production and crop yields and cattle husbandry, but more importantly, they map out the course of the hard-edged negotiations between landowners and laborers as they struggled to shape the new labor regime.
Call #:  
Mss.B.J134
Extent:
3 volume(s)