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History 
of 
Golden 
Grove 
A 
Sense 
of 
Place 
2014
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
AND 
ITS 
LOCATION 
THROUGH 
THE 
AGES 
Barbados 
is 
a 
cluster 
of 
coral 
rocks 
set 
on 
the 
far 
east 
of 
the 
Caribbean, 
bordered 
by 
the 
vast 
Atlantic 
Ocean. 
From 
Golden 
Grove 
you 
can 
glimpse 
the 
lighthouse 
marking 
the 
easterly 
point 
of 
Barbados. 
The 
story 
of 
who 
came 
here, 
and 
why, 
is 
told 
in 
the 
following 
pages, 
unfolding 
the 
“history 
within 
a 
house”. 
We 
start 
with 
2 
Geology 
and 
the 
supporting 
rock 
itself-­‐ 
the 
“Golden 
Grove 
Terrace”-­‐ 
which 
has 
been 
scientifically 
dated. 
Human 
“Pre-­‐history” 
follows. 
The 
earliest 
known 
inhabitants 
of 
Barbados-­‐ 
Amerindians-­‐ 
have 
been 
discovered 
to 
have 
lived 
in 
the 
vicinity 
of 
Golden 
Grove-­‐ 
attracted 
by 
the 
water 
of 
the 
Three 
Houses 
spring 
and 
stream. 
Recorded 
history 
follows 
British 
colonial 
settlement. 
The 
story 
of 
the 
area 
around 
Golden 
Grove 
unfolds 
very 
quickly 
after 
first 
arrivals 
on 
the 
island. 
Glimpses 
of 
plantation 
life, 
slavery 
and 
insurrection 
emerge 
from 
historical 
fragments 
relating 
directly 
to 
Golden 
Grove 
and 
its 
neighbours, 
including 
a 
pivotal 
moment 
for 
the 
island 
of 
the 
slave 
insurrection 
in 
1816. 
Our 
focus 
then 
turns 
to 
the 
life 
of 
a 
noted 
Barbadian, 
Florence 
Daysh, 
who 
was 
born 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
in 
1908. 
Her 
life 
provides 
a 
fascinating 
catalogue 
of 
a 
country 
in 
transition. 
The 
Great 
House 
today 
is 
structurally 
very 
similar 
to 
when 
she 
was 
born 
so 
that 
a 
visit 
to 
Golden 
Grove 
echoes 
the 
gentility 
of 
that 
era. 
Despite 
the 
end 
of 
sugar 
in 
the 
plantation 
lands 
of 
Golden 
Grove, 
the 
character 
of 
the 
house 
and 
gardens 
remain, 
albeit 
in 
a 
new 
way, 
supplemented 
by 
a 
sense 
of 
beauty 
from 
a 
collection 
of 
contemporary 
Barbadian 
artwork. 
We 
hope 
the 
pages 
below 
encourage 
you 
to 
visit 
Golden 
Grove, 
less 
than 
a 
century 
after 
Florence 
left 
(her 
father 
purchased 
neighbouring 
Thicketts 
plantation 
in 
1918).
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Geology 
Time 
has 
a 
geologic 
scale. 
The“Quaternary” 
period 
began 
c. 
2.5 
million 
years 
ago 
and 
developed 
into 
a 
warmer 
or 
“interglacial” 
period 
called 
the 
Holocene 
epoch 
around 
11,000 
years 
ago, 
enabling 
the 
rise 
of 
human 
civilisation. 
The 
epoch 
prior 
to 
this 
is 
known 
as 
the 
“Pleistocene”. 
The 
rocky 
area 
around 
Golden 
Grove 
was 
created 
in 
the 
Middle 
Pleistocene. 
A 
team 
of 
American 
scientists 
analysed 
coral 
deposits 
from 
the 
“Golden 
Grove 
Terrace” 
in 
1990, 
dating 
them 
as 
230,000-­‐216,000 
years 
old 
(shown 
on 
the 
map 
below). 
3
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Geology 
(continued) 
The 
coral 
analysed 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
was 
Acropora 
Palmata 
(or 
“Elkhorn” 
–first 
below, 
once 
prolific 
but 
now 
on 
the 
Endangered 
Species 
list) 
and 
Montastrea 
Cavernosa 
(or 
“Great 
Star”-­‐ 
next 
below, 
the 
predominant 
coral 
at 
40 
to 
100 
feet 
below 
sea 
level). 
Coral 
terraces 
in 
Barbados 
like 
Golden 
Grove 
are 
in 
geological 
terms 
very 
“young” 
but 
have 
been 
formed 
adjacent 
to 
rock 
that 
is 
much 
older-­‐ 
in 
the 
Scotland 
district 
being 
perhaps 
over 
40 
4 
million 
years 
old.
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Water 
and 
Food 
: 
The 
Arrival 
of 
Humans 
Human 
settlement 
has 
two 
requirements: 
potable 
water 
and 
access 
to 
food. 
The 
area 
around 
Golden 
Grove 
provides 
both: 
its 
current 
northern 
boundary 
is 
Three 
Houses 
stream, 
fed 
from 
a 
spring 
nearby. 
A 
little 
further 
north-­‐east 
is 
a 
bay 
where 
fishermen 
still 
set 
out 
to 
sea. 
Pre-­‐colonial 
human 
activity 
in 
this 
locality 
is 
perhaps 
no 
surprise. 
However 
archaeological 
research 
of 
Amerindian 
settlements 
in 
Barbados 
found 
few 
remains 
inland 
so 
that 
the 
site 
by 
the 
spring 
of 
Three 
Houses 
is 
important. 
The 
first 
exhibition 
by 
the 
Barbados 
Museum 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
describes 
the 
many 
aspects 
of 
Amerindian 
life 
and 
culture, 
which 
will 
be 
supplemented 
by 
specific 
findings 
and 
exhibits 
from 
the 
Three 
Houses 
excavations. 
Why 
the 
Amerindians 
left 
all 
of 
their 
settlements 
in 
Barbados 
remains 
a 
mystery-­‐ 
but 
the 
knowledge 
of 
Barbados 
from 
the 
Lokono 
in 
Guyana 
remained. 
There 
can 
be 
no 
doubt 
that 
they 
knew 
how 
to 
navigate 
the 
difficult 
waters 
of 
the 
eastern 
shores 
of 
Barbados 
and 
indeed 
the 
ancient 
name 
for 
Barbados, 
Ichirouganaim, 
may 
have 
meant 
“island 
with 
white 
teeth” 
or 
reefs. 
Unlike 
other 
Caribbean 
islands 
Amerindian 
problems 
were 
not 
created 
by 
the 
first 
colonial 
explorers 
(the 
Spanish 
and 
Portuguese). 
The 
Portuguese 
map 
of 
Vaz 
Dourado 
in 
1575 
names 
“Barbado” 
as 
the 
most 
easterly 
island 
of 
the 
Caribbean 
but 
under 
the 
Treaty 
of 
Tordesillas 
in 
1494 
the 
colonial 
world 
had 
been 
divided 
between 
Portugal 
and 
Spain, 
with 
Barbados 
falling 
on 
the 
Spanish 
side 
of 
the 
demarcation. 
So 
whilst 
the 
Portuguese 
ships 
may 
have 
landed 
for 
water, 
they 
did 
not 
colonise 
Barbados-­‐ 
it 
could 
not 
legally 
become 
Portuguese. 
Spain 
it 
appears 
didn’t 
think 
Barbados 
was 
worth 
the 
bother, 
although 
Christopher 
Columbus 
must 
have 
sailed 
close 
by 
in 
his 
4th 
(and 
last) 
voyage 
to 
the 
Caribbean 
in 
1502. 
5
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
English 
Settlement 
The 
arrival 
of 
the 
British 
in 
1625 
and 
first 
colonial 
settlement 
of 
Barbados 
in 
1627 
is 
well 
recorded. 
The 
island 
was 
deserted 
and 
this 
may 
have 
been 
an 
attraction. 
Initial 
settlement 
took 
place 
along 
the 
west 
coast, 
guided 
by 
the 
sea 
captains 
who 
first 
landed 
at 
Holetown 
under 
the 
business 
interests 
of 
a 
London 
merchant, 
William 
Courteen 
and 
near 
Bridgetown, 
fostered 
by 
the 
Earl 
of 
Carlisle. 
In 
1627 
King 
Charles 
1st 
granted 
the 
Earl 
of 
Carlisle 
an 
assignment 
of 
many 
Caribbean 
islands, 
including 
Barbados, 
ousting 
the 
interests 
of 
Courteen. 
Captain 
Henry 
Hawley 
was 
sent 
back 
to 
Barbados 
by 
the 
Earl 
of 
Carlisle 
to 
protect 
his 
new 
fiefdom 
and 
in 
1630 
Hawley 
was 
made 
Governor 
of 
Barbados. 
Hawley 
did 
his 
best 
to 
monetise 
this 
opportunity 
by 
selling 
land 
to 
the 
new 
English 
colonists, 
arriving 
to 
make 
their 
fortune. 
And 
it 
is 
not 
long 
before 
the 
story 
turns 
to 
the 
land 
near 
Golden 
Grove 
and 
its 
access 
to 
water. 
Records 
(The 
Hughes/ 
Queree 
Plantation 
Files) 
in 
the 
Barbados 
Archives 
show 
how 
a 
Captain 
Francis 
Skeete 
purchased 
4500 
acres 
of 
land 
in 
eastern 
Barbados 
from 
Governor 
Hawley 
in 
1638-­‐ 
a 
very 
large 
estate; 
how 
the 
legitimacy 
of 
this 
transaction 
(amongst 
others) 
by 
Governor 
Hawley 
was 
questioned 
in 
a 
commission 
of 
1640; 
and 
how 
the 
parcel 
of 
land 
that 
is 
assumed 
to 
now 
include 
Three 
Houses, 
Thicketts, 
Wiltshire 
and 
Golden 
Grove 
plantations 
( 
still 
substantial 
at 
1,160 
acres)was 
found 
to 
be 
legitimate. 
Whilst 
Skeete 
continued 
in 
occupation, 
he 
mortgaged 
500 
acres 
to 
his 
brother-­‐in-­‐law 
William 
Hilliard 
(son 
of 
a 
Merchant 
in 
Southampton) 
in 
1643 
shortly 
before 
his 
death. 
It 
appears 
that 
William 
Hilliard 
had 
already 
owned 
land 
in 
Barbados 
prior 
to 
the 
arrival 
of 
his 
sister 
and 
brother-­‐in-­‐law 
and 
likely 
bankrolled 
them. 
Indeed 
after 
Skeete’s 
death 
Hilliard 
funded 
his 
sister’s 
new 
husband 
and 
her 
two 
sons 
to 
take 
over 
Three 
Houses. 
Captain 
Skeete, 
though, 
had 
the 
honour 
of 
the 
local 
bay 
being 
named 
after 
him 
(Skeetes 
Bay 
is 
well 
worth 
a 
visit 
with 
this 
in 
mind). 
What 
these 
records 
show 
is 
that 
Golden 
Grove 
was 
part 
of 
land 
“colonised” 
a 
mere 
decade 
after 
the 
first 
settlement 
of 
Barbados. 
6
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
English 
Settlement 
(continued) 
These 
very 
early 
plantations 
grew 
a 
variety 
of 
crops, 
highlighted 
in 
a 
lease 
of 
Three 
Houses 
which 
has 
an 
inventory 
attached 
in 
1658 
(shown 
below). 
The 
plantation 
is 
described 
as 
including 
sugar 
canes, 
indigo 
and 
cotton. 
The 
inventory 
includes 
5 
men 
& 
5 
women 
negroes, 
5 
cowes 
(sic) 
and 
1 
bull. 
The 
condescension 
to 
humanity 
is 
that 
each 
negro 
is 
named 
(but 
not 
the 
cattle!). 
At 
the 
end 
of 
the 
lease 
the 
Negroes 
and 
Cattle 
had 
to 
be 
delivered 
back 
to 
the 
Lessor-­‐ 
or 
an 
equivalent 
number 
given 
any 
fatalities. 
“Inventory” 
at 
Three 
Houses 
7
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Sugar 
The 
Hughes/ 
Queree 
plantation 
files 
also 
show 
when 
Golden 
Grove 
became 
an 
independent 
plantation. 
“Ince” 
is 
shown 
as 
owner 
from 
1674-­‐ 
another 
Captain-­‐ 
and 
his 
relations 
owned 
a 
house 
and 
a 
plantation 
here 
of 
136 
acres 
till 
1721. 
By 
1674 
sugar 
had 
become 
the 
overwhelming 
cash 
crop 
throughout 
Barbados 
with 
plantations 
of 
a 
similar 
size 
to 
Golden 
Grove 
(or 
even 
larger). 
The 
triangular 
trade-­‐ 
guns 
and 
trinkets 
to 
Africa, 
slaves 
to 
Barbados, 
sugar 
to 
England-­‐ 
had 
taken 
over 
with 
hugely 
profitable 
results 
for 
many 
landowners 
who 
consolidated 
their 
interests 
in 
larger 
plantations. 
The 
“ten-­‐acre” 
or 
smaller 
settlers 
largely 
disappeared. 
Daily 
existence 
for 
the 
planters 
must 
have 
included 
a 
comfortable 
“family 
life”. 
Mary 
Ince 
was 
recorded 
as 
marrying 
Robert 
Hackett 
in 
1702 
and 
they 
must 
have 
occupied 
Golden 
Grove 
as 
the 
plantation 
became 
known 
as 
“Hacketts”. 
The 
“widow 
Hackett” 
sold 
the 
plantation 
to 
Henry 
Evans 
who 
in 
his 
will 
of 
1743 
passed 
“Hacketts” 
to 
his 
nephew 
Henry 
Walker. 
Despite 
Walker’s 
marriage 
to 
Ann 
Clarke 
(and 
a 
mention 
in 
the 
marriage 
settlement 
of 
1777) 
the 
house 
was 
sold 
to 
Elliot 
Grasset 
in 
1785, 
a 
man 
who 
seems 
unrelated. 
The 
first 
100 
years 
of 
Golden 
Grove 
as 
a 
separate 
entity 
was 
probably 
trying 
at 
times 
for 
the 
owners, 
with 
recorded 
hurricanes, 
other 
climate 
challenges 
and 
sugar 
price 
fluctuations 
resulting 
in 
financial 
pressures, 
but 
overall 
it 
must 
have 
been 
a 
success-­‐ 
for 
the 
owner 
and 
his 
family. 
For 
the 
slaves 
it 
was 
a 
different-­‐ 
and 
largely 
unrecorded 
story. 
A 
slave 
song 
from 
the 
1770s, 
annotated 
by 
William 
Sharp, 
the 
abolitionist, 
from 
conversations 
with 
a 
secretary 
to 
the 
Governor 
of 
Barbados, 
includes 
an 
“optimistic” 
line 
“Massa 
buy 
me, 
he 
no 
kill 
me”. 
Slaves 
had 
no 
rights 
and 
were 
totally 
subject 
to 
the 
whims 
of 
their 
masters. 
Another 
line 
is 
also 
chilling: 
“For 
I 
live 
with 
a 
bad 
man, 
for 
I 
would 
go 
to 
the 
riverside 
regular”. 
The 
“riverside” 
(where 
slaves 
were 
sold 
like 
cattle) 
demonstrates 
the 
huge 
uncertainty 
of 
slave 
life. 
An 
annotation 
By 
William 
Sharp 
is 
shown 
overleaf. 
8
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Sugar 
(continued) 
The 
Grasset 
Family 
& 
Golden 
Grove 
Elliot 
Grasset, 
whose 
wealth 
from 
Golden 
Grove 
allowed 
sending 
his 
son 
to 
Eton, 
was 
apparently 
borne 
illegitimate 
but 
from 
a 
family 
that 
had 
owned 
Grazettes 
plantation 
in 
St 
Michael 
. 
“Grazette 
represented 
a 
new 
elite 
group, 
earning 
a 
place 
by 
dint 
of 
knowledge 
and 
hard 
work, 
rather 
than 
by 
inheritance 
over 
several 
generations 
(Bobby 
Morris: 
The 
1816 
Uprising-­‐ 
A 
Hell-­‐broth”). 
Hacketts 
got 
a 
new 
name 
: 
“Golden 
Grove”-­‐ 
a 
popular 
name 
it 
seems 
in 
the 
Caribbean 
where 
most 
islands 
have 
a 
plantation 
with 
this 
title. 
No 
doubt 
it 
was 
golden, 
for 
a 
time, 
for 
the 
Grazette 
family-­‐ 
both 
Elliot 
Grazette 
and 
his 
son 
William 
were 
members 
of 
the 
Barbados 
House 
of 
Parliament 
for 
St 
Philip, 
at 
a 
time 
when 
such 
honours 
were 
reserved 
for 
the 
wealthy. 
9
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Insurrection 
The 
Grassets 
also 
endured 
the 
largest 
uprising 
Barbados 
has 
ever 
had. 
The 
slave 
revolt 
of 
1816 
is 
popularly 
known 
as 
the 
“Bussa 
revolt” 
after 
one 
of 
its 
leaders, 
who 
was 
a 
“senior” 
slave 
at 
Baileys, 
which 
borders 
Golden 
Grove. 
The 
insurgents 
were 
slaves 
and 
some 
coloured 
free 
men, 
with 
limited 
weapons 
and 
a 
desire 
to 
overthrow 
a 
tyrannical 
regime. 
Bobby 
Morris’ 
article 
shows 
how 
life 
at 
Baileys 
(and 
Wiltshires, 
both 
next 
to 
Golden 
Grove) 
had 
become 
particularly 
gruesome 
for 
its 
slaves 
under 
a 
notorious 
manager. 
A 
Private 
Letter 
from 
a 
soldier 
stationed 
at 
St 
Ann’s 
Fort 
(fragments 
shown 
below) 
testifies 
how 
about 
400 
insurgents 
assembled 
at 
Baileys, 
to 
be 
faced 
by 
about 
150 
soldiers, 
on 
Tuesday 
the 
16th. 
10
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
“ 
with 
an 
extraordinary 
emblematic 
flag. 
11 
They 
were 
pursued 
to 
the 
house 
of 
Mr. 
Grasset, 
which 
they 
occupied...”
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
An 
Extraordinary 
Emblematic 
Flag 
What 
really 
drove 
the 
insurgents? 
The 
Private 
Letter 
mentions 
an 
“extraordinary 
emblematic 
flag” 
which 
they 
carried. 
An 
article 
by 
Karl 
Watson 
provides 
some 
clues 
as 
indeed 
does 
the 
12 
attached 
copy 
of 
the 
flag 
taken 
from 
the 
British 
Library 
including 
the 
words 
“Royal 
Endeavour”. 
Did 
the 
insurgents 
believe 
they 
had 
a 
legitimate 
claim 
authorised 
by 
the 
British 
(and 
that 
the 
local 
planters 
were 
simply 
denying 
a 
freedom 
granted 
by 
the 
British 
government)? 
If 
so 
the 
words 
in 
the 
letter 
quoting 
the 
events 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
are 
poignant: 
“The 
insurgents 
did 
not 
think 
that 
our 
(Bourbon 
Blacks) 
men 
would 
fight 
against 
black 
men, 
but 
thank 
God 
they 
were 
deceived”.
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
“the 
conduct 
of 
the 
Bourbon 
Blacks.. 
has 
been 
the 
admiration 
of 
everybody” 
It 
must 
have 
been 
a 
double 
disappointment 
for 
the 
rebels-­‐ 
British 
soldiers 
attacked 
the 
insurgents 
and 
included 
within 
the 
ranks 
of 
the 
British 
were 
local 
black 
soldiers. 
Some 
accounts 
describe 
the 
insurgents 
as 
being 
initially 
confused 
as 
they 
thought 
the 
black 
soldiers 
were 
on 
their 
side! 
We 
will 
not 
truly 
know 
the 
motivations 
of 
the 
losers-­‐ 
the 
only 
records 
are 
from 
the 
winners, 
including 
a 
letter 
from 
the 
head 
of 
the 
army, 
Colonel 
Codd. 
He 
describes 
a 
driving 
force 
for 
the 
rebellion 
being 
the 
way 
the 
Registry 
Bill 
was 
misquoted 
by 
mischievous 
parties 
to 
indicate 
emancipation 
was 
desired 
by 
the 
British 
parliament; 
how 
the 
slaves 
had 
not 
been 
mistreated, 
but 
rather 
believed 
the 
island 
belonged 
to 
them 
rather 
than 
white 
men 
(whom 
they 
would 
destroy, 
reserving 
the 
females!). 
In 
fact 
hardly 
any 
whites 
were 
killed, 
although 
there 
was 
much 
damage 
to 
property. 
And 
so 
whilst 
the 
first 
reason 
rings 
true, 
the 
second 
half 
does 
not 
accord 
with 
ample 
opportunity 
for 
murder. 
Many 
insurgents 
were 
rounded 
up, 
to 
be 
tried 
later, 
and 
hanged 
or 
imprisoned. 
The 
rebellion 
was 
defeated. 
But 
its 
effect 
echoed 
into 
the 
history 
of 
Barbados 
and 
was 
undoubtedly 
a 
part 
of 
the 
ending 
of 
slavery. 
13
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Change 
and 
Chancery 
In 
the 
end, 
it 
was 
indeed 
the 
British 
government 
which 
outlawed 
slavery 
in 
the 
colonies 
(but 
only 
after 
intense 
domestic 
religious 
and 
moral 
pressure). 
The 
planters-­‐ 
but 
not 
the 
slaves-­‐ 
received 
compensation. 
In 
the 
1830s 
an 
intermediate 
stage 
of 
“apprenticeship” 
briefly 
kept 
former 
slaves 
locked 
to 
the 
plantation-­‐ 
and 
after 
a 
devastating 
hurricane 
of 
1831 
the 
rebuilding 
no 
doubt 
benefitted 
from 
such 
free 
labour. 
It 
is 
thought 
the 
hurricane 
affected 
Golden 
Grove, 
large 
parts 
of 
which 
today 
must 
date 
from 
that 
time. 
The 
Grazette 
family 
owned 
Golden 
Grove 
until 
1854, 
selling 
for 
ÂŁ10,000. 
Perhaps 
their 
luck 
had 
run 
out, 
as 
13 
years 
later 
the 
property 
was 
sold 
again 
for 
ÂŁ16,500 
(with 
the 
same 
287 
acres). 
The 
second 
half 
of 
the 
19th 
century 
saw 
two 
registrations 
in 
the 
debtor-­‐ridden 
Chancery 
Court 
for 
Golden 
Grove, 
indicating 
problems 
for 
the 
estate 
as 
ownership 
again 
changed 
hands. 
Plantations 
were 
often 
heavily 
mortgaged 
and 
the 
fall 
in 
sugar 
prices 
in 
this 
period 
took 
a 
heavy 
toll. 
Three 
Houses 
also 
had 
two 
Chancery 
Court 
references 
in 
these 
days 
of 
cholera 
and 
hardship. 
(below: 
a 
Photo 
of 
Golden 
Grove 
of 
uncertain 
date) 
14
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Resilience 
and 
Reunion 
An 
interesting 
chapter 
for 
Golden 
Grove 
began 
in 
1905 
with 
its 
purchase 
by 
Howard 
Smith 
and 
Mr 
S. 
Browne, 
the 
latter 
appearing 
the 
principal 
financier. 
Howard 
Smith 
was 
a 
white 
planter 
who, 
against 
his 
class 
and 
colour, 
married 
a 
coloured 
woman, 
Eveline. 
It 
is 
said 
that 
many 
ostracised 
him 
but 
this 
did 
not 
seem 
to 
hinder 
his 
progress 
in 
a 
period 
when 
sugar 
prices 
took 
a 
turn 
for 
the 
better 
and 
the 
resilience 
of 
planters 
shone 
through. 
Howard 
and 
Eveline 
had 
a 
daughter, 
Florence, 
who 
was 
born 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
in 
1908. 
She 
was 
the 
most 
influential 
woman 
politician 
of 
her 
day 
in 
Barbados. 
Florence 
grew 
up 
later 
at 
Thicketts, 
purchased 
by 
her 
father 
in 
1918. 
At 
times 
he 
managed 
Golden 
Grove, 
Thicketts, 
Three 
Houses 
and 
Fortescue, 
in 
a 
syndicate 
with 
Brown 
that 
also 
owned 
Three 
Houses 
factory 
which 
then 
had 
a 
loading 
facility 
to 
the 
functional 
Bridgetown: 
Bathsheba 
railway. 
The 
size 
of 
these 
various 
estates 
was 
similar 
to 
the 
original 
“valid” 
interests 
purchased 
by 
Captain 
Skeete 
and 
is 
described 
in 
the 
sale 
to 
a 
syndicate 
in 
an 
agricultural 
paper 
of 
1920 
as 
“the 
biggest 
plantation 
sale 
yet”. 
Florence 
spent 
a 
life 
of 
voluntary 
service 
dedicated 
to 
the 
women 
and 
children 
of 
Barbados, 
with 
numerous 
achievements 
that 
were 
rewarded 
with 
an 
OBE 
in 
1957. 
She 
married 
a 
New 
Zealand 
naval 
captain, 
Commander 
Daysh 
in 
1947 
after 
war 
duties 
with 
the 
Red 
Cross. 
Her 
life 
was 
part 
of 
the 
“upper 
class” 
of 
plantation 
owners 
but 
she 
was 
incredibly 
popular. 
15
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
Florence 
Daysh 
at 
Election 
Time 
In 
1958 
Florence 
was 
elected 
to 
the 
West 
Indies 
Federal 
Parliament, 
as 
the 
only 
woman 
from 
Barbados, 
defeating 
Errol 
Barrow. 
Previously 
she 
had 
been 
elected 
to 
the 
Vestry 
of 
St 
Philip 
and 
the 
Legislative 
Council, 
in 
both 
cases 
as 
only 
the 
second 
woman 
in 
a 
long 
parliamentary 
history. 
In 
her 
maiden 
speech 
to 
Parliament 
she 
declared: 
“I 
am 
a 
woman 
of 
colour, 
and 
proud 
of 
it.” 
Florence 
was 
described 
an 
“indomitable”. 
Her 
mother 
Eveline 
is 
commemorated 
in 
the 
Eveline 
Smith 
wing 
of 
the 
St 
Philip 
District 
Hospital, 
again 
another 
charitable 
venture. 
Care 
for 
the 
community 
was 
perhaps 
the 
greatest 
legacy 
of 
a 
family 
whose 
success 
could 
not 
be 
questioned. 
16
HISTORY 
OF 
GOLDEN 
GROVE 
The 
End 
of 
Plantation 
Life 
(at 
Golden 
Grove) 
Messrs 
Brown 
and 
the 
syndicate 
funding 
Three 
Houses 
et 
al 
must 
have 
considered 
Golden 
Grove 
surplus 
to 
their 
requirements 
as 
it 
was 
sold 
in 
1921 
for 
ÂŁ16,000. 
The 
last 
chapter 
in 
Golden 
Grove’s 
history 
as 
a 
plantation 
began. 
Herbert 
and 
then 
his 
son 
Geoffrey 
Manning 
were 
the 
last 
of 
the 
planters 
here, 
still 
remembered 
by 
older 
residents 
with 
some 
affection. 
They 
ran 
a 
plantation 
when 
St 
Philip 
was 
still 
full 
of 
sugar 
cane 
for 
about 
50 
years, 
including 
the 
hardship 
period 
of 
the 
1930s. 
Geoffrey 
Manning 
was 
known 
as 
a 
keen 
sportsman-­‐ 
he 
was 
one 
of 
the 
founders 
of 
the 
Barbados 
Rally 
Club 
in 
1957. 
By 
1970 
the 
economic 
viability 
of 
sugar 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
was 
finally 
in 
doubt. 
This 
was 
also 
the 
year 
that 
the 
sugar 
factory 
at 
Three 
Houses 
closed. 
The 
land 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
was 
apportioned 
to 
create 
smaller 
farming 
interests 
and 
the 
house 
became 
a 
home 
for 
another 
keen 
sportsman 
and 
polo 
player; 
later 
it 
passed 
to 
a 
newer 
resident 
to 
the 
island, 
a 
successful 
entrepreneur 
in 
the 
up-­‐coming 
dominant 
industry 
of 
tourism 
and 
hospitality. 
And 
it 
is 
in 
this 
world 
that 
Golden 
Grove 
fits 
today. 
Of 
course 
its 
history 
remains-­‐ 
and 
itself 
can 
be 
a 
new 
lease 
of 
life 
to 
attract 
visitors 
and 
so 
successfully 
maintain 
the 
house 
and 
gardens. 
As 
part 
of 
this, 
the 
Barbados 
Museum 
will 
be 
showing 
a 
series 
of 
exhibitions 
at 
Golden 
Grove 
with 
reference 
to 
the 
particular 
history 
here. 
The 
first 
showing 
commences, 
naturally, 
with 
an 
emphasis 
on 
the 
original 
settlers 
who 
inhabited 
close 
by, 
the 
“Amerindians”. 
17

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Golden Grove House History

  • 1. History of Golden Grove A Sense of Place 2014
  • 2. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE GOLDEN GROVE AND ITS LOCATION THROUGH THE AGES Barbados is a cluster of coral rocks set on the far east of the Caribbean, bordered by the vast Atlantic Ocean. From Golden Grove you can glimpse the lighthouse marking the easterly point of Barbados. The story of who came here, and why, is told in the following pages, unfolding the “history within a house”. We start with 2 Geology and the supporting rock itself-­‐ the “Golden Grove Terrace”-­‐ which has been scientifically dated. Human “Pre-­‐history” follows. The earliest known inhabitants of Barbados-­‐ Amerindians-­‐ have been discovered to have lived in the vicinity of Golden Grove-­‐ attracted by the water of the Three Houses spring and stream. Recorded history follows British colonial settlement. The story of the area around Golden Grove unfolds very quickly after first arrivals on the island. Glimpses of plantation life, slavery and insurrection emerge from historical fragments relating directly to Golden Grove and its neighbours, including a pivotal moment for the island of the slave insurrection in 1816. Our focus then turns to the life of a noted Barbadian, Florence Daysh, who was born at Golden Grove in 1908. Her life provides a fascinating catalogue of a country in transition. The Great House today is structurally very similar to when she was born so that a visit to Golden Grove echoes the gentility of that era. Despite the end of sugar in the plantation lands of Golden Grove, the character of the house and gardens remain, albeit in a new way, supplemented by a sense of beauty from a collection of contemporary Barbadian artwork. We hope the pages below encourage you to visit Golden Grove, less than a century after Florence left (her father purchased neighbouring Thicketts plantation in 1918).
  • 3. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Geology Time has a geologic scale. The“Quaternary” period began c. 2.5 million years ago and developed into a warmer or “interglacial” period called the Holocene epoch around 11,000 years ago, enabling the rise of human civilisation. The epoch prior to this is known as the “Pleistocene”. The rocky area around Golden Grove was created in the Middle Pleistocene. A team of American scientists analysed coral deposits from the “Golden Grove Terrace” in 1990, dating them as 230,000-­‐216,000 years old (shown on the map below). 3
  • 4. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Geology (continued) The coral analysed at Golden Grove was Acropora Palmata (or “Elkhorn” –first below, once prolific but now on the Endangered Species list) and Montastrea Cavernosa (or “Great Star”-­‐ next below, the predominant coral at 40 to 100 feet below sea level). Coral terraces in Barbados like Golden Grove are in geological terms very “young” but have been formed adjacent to rock that is much older-­‐ in the Scotland district being perhaps over 40 4 million years old.
  • 5. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Water and Food : The Arrival of Humans Human settlement has two requirements: potable water and access to food. The area around Golden Grove provides both: its current northern boundary is Three Houses stream, fed from a spring nearby. A little further north-­‐east is a bay where fishermen still set out to sea. Pre-­‐colonial human activity in this locality is perhaps no surprise. However archaeological research of Amerindian settlements in Barbados found few remains inland so that the site by the spring of Three Houses is important. The first exhibition by the Barbados Museum at Golden Grove describes the many aspects of Amerindian life and culture, which will be supplemented by specific findings and exhibits from the Three Houses excavations. Why the Amerindians left all of their settlements in Barbados remains a mystery-­‐ but the knowledge of Barbados from the Lokono in Guyana remained. There can be no doubt that they knew how to navigate the difficult waters of the eastern shores of Barbados and indeed the ancient name for Barbados, Ichirouganaim, may have meant “island with white teeth” or reefs. Unlike other Caribbean islands Amerindian problems were not created by the first colonial explorers (the Spanish and Portuguese). The Portuguese map of Vaz Dourado in 1575 names “Barbado” as the most easterly island of the Caribbean but under the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494 the colonial world had been divided between Portugal and Spain, with Barbados falling on the Spanish side of the demarcation. So whilst the Portuguese ships may have landed for water, they did not colonise Barbados-­‐ it could not legally become Portuguese. Spain it appears didn’t think Barbados was worth the bother, although Christopher Columbus must have sailed close by in his 4th (and last) voyage to the Caribbean in 1502. 5
  • 6. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE English Settlement The arrival of the British in 1625 and first colonial settlement of Barbados in 1627 is well recorded. The island was deserted and this may have been an attraction. Initial settlement took place along the west coast, guided by the sea captains who first landed at Holetown under the business interests of a London merchant, William Courteen and near Bridgetown, fostered by the Earl of Carlisle. In 1627 King Charles 1st granted the Earl of Carlisle an assignment of many Caribbean islands, including Barbados, ousting the interests of Courteen. Captain Henry Hawley was sent back to Barbados by the Earl of Carlisle to protect his new fiefdom and in 1630 Hawley was made Governor of Barbados. Hawley did his best to monetise this opportunity by selling land to the new English colonists, arriving to make their fortune. And it is not long before the story turns to the land near Golden Grove and its access to water. Records (The Hughes/ Queree Plantation Files) in the Barbados Archives show how a Captain Francis Skeete purchased 4500 acres of land in eastern Barbados from Governor Hawley in 1638-­‐ a very large estate; how the legitimacy of this transaction (amongst others) by Governor Hawley was questioned in a commission of 1640; and how the parcel of land that is assumed to now include Three Houses, Thicketts, Wiltshire and Golden Grove plantations ( still substantial at 1,160 acres)was found to be legitimate. Whilst Skeete continued in occupation, he mortgaged 500 acres to his brother-­‐in-­‐law William Hilliard (son of a Merchant in Southampton) in 1643 shortly before his death. It appears that William Hilliard had already owned land in Barbados prior to the arrival of his sister and brother-­‐in-­‐law and likely bankrolled them. Indeed after Skeete’s death Hilliard funded his sister’s new husband and her two sons to take over Three Houses. Captain Skeete, though, had the honour of the local bay being named after him (Skeetes Bay is well worth a visit with this in mind). What these records show is that Golden Grove was part of land “colonised” a mere decade after the first settlement of Barbados. 6
  • 7. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE English Settlement (continued) These very early plantations grew a variety of crops, highlighted in a lease of Three Houses which has an inventory attached in 1658 (shown below). The plantation is described as including sugar canes, indigo and cotton. The inventory includes 5 men & 5 women negroes, 5 cowes (sic) and 1 bull. The condescension to humanity is that each negro is named (but not the cattle!). At the end of the lease the Negroes and Cattle had to be delivered back to the Lessor-­‐ or an equivalent number given any fatalities. “Inventory” at Three Houses 7
  • 8. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Sugar The Hughes/ Queree plantation files also show when Golden Grove became an independent plantation. “Ince” is shown as owner from 1674-­‐ another Captain-­‐ and his relations owned a house and a plantation here of 136 acres till 1721. By 1674 sugar had become the overwhelming cash crop throughout Barbados with plantations of a similar size to Golden Grove (or even larger). The triangular trade-­‐ guns and trinkets to Africa, slaves to Barbados, sugar to England-­‐ had taken over with hugely profitable results for many landowners who consolidated their interests in larger plantations. The “ten-­‐acre” or smaller settlers largely disappeared. Daily existence for the planters must have included a comfortable “family life”. Mary Ince was recorded as marrying Robert Hackett in 1702 and they must have occupied Golden Grove as the plantation became known as “Hacketts”. The “widow Hackett” sold the plantation to Henry Evans who in his will of 1743 passed “Hacketts” to his nephew Henry Walker. Despite Walker’s marriage to Ann Clarke (and a mention in the marriage settlement of 1777) the house was sold to Elliot Grasset in 1785, a man who seems unrelated. The first 100 years of Golden Grove as a separate entity was probably trying at times for the owners, with recorded hurricanes, other climate challenges and sugar price fluctuations resulting in financial pressures, but overall it must have been a success-­‐ for the owner and his family. For the slaves it was a different-­‐ and largely unrecorded story. A slave song from the 1770s, annotated by William Sharp, the abolitionist, from conversations with a secretary to the Governor of Barbados, includes an “optimistic” line “Massa buy me, he no kill me”. Slaves had no rights and were totally subject to the whims of their masters. Another line is also chilling: “For I live with a bad man, for I would go to the riverside regular”. The “riverside” (where slaves were sold like cattle) demonstrates the huge uncertainty of slave life. An annotation By William Sharp is shown overleaf. 8
  • 9. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Sugar (continued) The Grasset Family & Golden Grove Elliot Grasset, whose wealth from Golden Grove allowed sending his son to Eton, was apparently borne illegitimate but from a family that had owned Grazettes plantation in St Michael . “Grazette represented a new elite group, earning a place by dint of knowledge and hard work, rather than by inheritance over several generations (Bobby Morris: The 1816 Uprising-­‐ A Hell-­‐broth”). Hacketts got a new name : “Golden Grove”-­‐ a popular name it seems in the Caribbean where most islands have a plantation with this title. No doubt it was golden, for a time, for the Grazette family-­‐ both Elliot Grazette and his son William were members of the Barbados House of Parliament for St Philip, at a time when such honours were reserved for the wealthy. 9
  • 10. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Insurrection The Grassets also endured the largest uprising Barbados has ever had. The slave revolt of 1816 is popularly known as the “Bussa revolt” after one of its leaders, who was a “senior” slave at Baileys, which borders Golden Grove. The insurgents were slaves and some coloured free men, with limited weapons and a desire to overthrow a tyrannical regime. Bobby Morris’ article shows how life at Baileys (and Wiltshires, both next to Golden Grove) had become particularly gruesome for its slaves under a notorious manager. A Private Letter from a soldier stationed at St Ann’s Fort (fragments shown below) testifies how about 400 insurgents assembled at Baileys, to be faced by about 150 soldiers, on Tuesday the 16th. 10
  • 11. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE “ with an extraordinary emblematic flag. 11 They were pursued to the house of Mr. Grasset, which they occupied...”
  • 12. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE An Extraordinary Emblematic Flag What really drove the insurgents? The Private Letter mentions an “extraordinary emblematic flag” which they carried. An article by Karl Watson provides some clues as indeed does the 12 attached copy of the flag taken from the British Library including the words “Royal Endeavour”. Did the insurgents believe they had a legitimate claim authorised by the British (and that the local planters were simply denying a freedom granted by the British government)? If so the words in the letter quoting the events at Golden Grove are poignant: “The insurgents did not think that our (Bourbon Blacks) men would fight against black men, but thank God they were deceived”.
  • 13. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE “the conduct of the Bourbon Blacks.. has been the admiration of everybody” It must have been a double disappointment for the rebels-­‐ British soldiers attacked the insurgents and included within the ranks of the British were local black soldiers. Some accounts describe the insurgents as being initially confused as they thought the black soldiers were on their side! We will not truly know the motivations of the losers-­‐ the only records are from the winners, including a letter from the head of the army, Colonel Codd. He describes a driving force for the rebellion being the way the Registry Bill was misquoted by mischievous parties to indicate emancipation was desired by the British parliament; how the slaves had not been mistreated, but rather believed the island belonged to them rather than white men (whom they would destroy, reserving the females!). In fact hardly any whites were killed, although there was much damage to property. And so whilst the first reason rings true, the second half does not accord with ample opportunity for murder. Many insurgents were rounded up, to be tried later, and hanged or imprisoned. The rebellion was defeated. But its effect echoed into the history of Barbados and was undoubtedly a part of the ending of slavery. 13
  • 14. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Change and Chancery In the end, it was indeed the British government which outlawed slavery in the colonies (but only after intense domestic religious and moral pressure). The planters-­‐ but not the slaves-­‐ received compensation. In the 1830s an intermediate stage of “apprenticeship” briefly kept former slaves locked to the plantation-­‐ and after a devastating hurricane of 1831 the rebuilding no doubt benefitted from such free labour. It is thought the hurricane affected Golden Grove, large parts of which today must date from that time. The Grazette family owned Golden Grove until 1854, selling for ÂŁ10,000. Perhaps their luck had run out, as 13 years later the property was sold again for ÂŁ16,500 (with the same 287 acres). The second half of the 19th century saw two registrations in the debtor-­‐ridden Chancery Court for Golden Grove, indicating problems for the estate as ownership again changed hands. Plantations were often heavily mortgaged and the fall in sugar prices in this period took a heavy toll. Three Houses also had two Chancery Court references in these days of cholera and hardship. (below: a Photo of Golden Grove of uncertain date) 14
  • 15. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Resilience and Reunion An interesting chapter for Golden Grove began in 1905 with its purchase by Howard Smith and Mr S. Browne, the latter appearing the principal financier. Howard Smith was a white planter who, against his class and colour, married a coloured woman, Eveline. It is said that many ostracised him but this did not seem to hinder his progress in a period when sugar prices took a turn for the better and the resilience of planters shone through. Howard and Eveline had a daughter, Florence, who was born at Golden Grove in 1908. She was the most influential woman politician of her day in Barbados. Florence grew up later at Thicketts, purchased by her father in 1918. At times he managed Golden Grove, Thicketts, Three Houses and Fortescue, in a syndicate with Brown that also owned Three Houses factory which then had a loading facility to the functional Bridgetown: Bathsheba railway. The size of these various estates was similar to the original “valid” interests purchased by Captain Skeete and is described in the sale to a syndicate in an agricultural paper of 1920 as “the biggest plantation sale yet”. Florence spent a life of voluntary service dedicated to the women and children of Barbados, with numerous achievements that were rewarded with an OBE in 1957. She married a New Zealand naval captain, Commander Daysh in 1947 after war duties with the Red Cross. Her life was part of the “upper class” of plantation owners but she was incredibly popular. 15
  • 16. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE Florence Daysh at Election Time In 1958 Florence was elected to the West Indies Federal Parliament, as the only woman from Barbados, defeating Errol Barrow. Previously she had been elected to the Vestry of St Philip and the Legislative Council, in both cases as only the second woman in a long parliamentary history. In her maiden speech to Parliament she declared: “I am a woman of colour, and proud of it.” Florence was described an “indomitable”. Her mother Eveline is commemorated in the Eveline Smith wing of the St Philip District Hospital, again another charitable venture. Care for the community was perhaps the greatest legacy of a family whose success could not be questioned. 16
  • 17. HISTORY OF GOLDEN GROVE The End of Plantation Life (at Golden Grove) Messrs Brown and the syndicate funding Three Houses et al must have considered Golden Grove surplus to their requirements as it was sold in 1921 for ÂŁ16,000. The last chapter in Golden Grove’s history as a plantation began. Herbert and then his son Geoffrey Manning were the last of the planters here, still remembered by older residents with some affection. They ran a plantation when St Philip was still full of sugar cane for about 50 years, including the hardship period of the 1930s. Geoffrey Manning was known as a keen sportsman-­‐ he was one of the founders of the Barbados Rally Club in 1957. By 1970 the economic viability of sugar at Golden Grove was finally in doubt. This was also the year that the sugar factory at Three Houses closed. The land at Golden Grove was apportioned to create smaller farming interests and the house became a home for another keen sportsman and polo player; later it passed to a newer resident to the island, a successful entrepreneur in the up-­‐coming dominant industry of tourism and hospitality. And it is in this world that Golden Grove fits today. Of course its history remains-­‐ and itself can be a new lease of life to attract visitors and so successfully maintain the house and gardens. As part of this, the Barbados Museum will be showing a series of exhibitions at Golden Grove with reference to the particular history here. The first showing commences, naturally, with an emphasis on the original settlers who inhabited close by, the “Amerindians”. 17