Nuala Zahedieh
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Trade, plunder and Irishmen in early English Jamaica
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Historians generally remember Jamaica as Britain’s leading sugar producer in the eighteenth century, but, from its first capture in 1655, it was equally valued as a gateway to the Spanish empire: the largest, richest and most highly coveted market in America. In the seventeenth century, planting made slow progress, but plunder and contraband trade grew apace. Although Roman Catholic Irishmen did not have political rights in the island, and seem to have played little part in agriculture, they were more visible in the smuggling trade, as they provoked less hostility and suspicion among the Spaniards than the hated English. Although their participation rates cannot be measured with any precision, individual cases such as Menasseh Gillingham, an experienced smuggler who helped negotiate the terms of the asiento treaty in 1713, show that Irishmen played a significant role in forging links between Jamaica and Spanish markets. However, given the ease with which the Irish crossed the borders between the empires, they did, at times, change allegiance. The most notorious guarda-costa of the seventeenth century, and the scourge of Jamaican traders, was Philip Fitzgerald, an Irishman who defected to Havana in the 1670s.

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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

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