Finola O’Kane
Search for other papers by Finola O’Kane in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Designed in parallel or in translation? The linked Jamaican and Irish landscapes of the Browne family, marquesses of Sligo
Abstract only
Log-in for full text

In 1752 Dennis Kelly’s only daughter and heiress, Elizabeth, married Peter Browne (1731?–80), son and heir of Sir John Browne (1709–76), owner of a substantial Irish landed estate that had been accumulating since Elizabethan times, with large tracts located in the poor and unimproved reaches of the far west. Elizabeth Browne-Kelly and her husband continued her father’s practice of removing further and further from the real landscape of Jamaica, while using the profits of plantation to benefit their estate in Galway and Mayo. In the early nineteenth century the young George Hildebrand surveyed, measured and drew both Irish and Jamaican estates. A scion of a transplanted German family, he subsequently became the estate agent until he was sued for corrupt management practices by the Browne family in the 1850s. Family taste and tradition on one side of the Atlantic could transfer easily and quickly to the other. This chapter will explore the impact of the families of Kelly, Browne and Hildebrand on the connected landscapes of Ireland and Jamaica during the long eighteenth century. It will also touch upon ways in which the steady stream of sugar income that the Jamaican plantations produced (even if the sugar itself was never landed in Ireland) funded Irish projects of urban and landscape improvement throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth century.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 613 289 61
Full Text Views 83 55 8
PDF Downloads 86 51 11