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Jamaicans Came To North America In...

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  • Jamaicans Came To North America In...

    THE FIRST JAMAICANS IN AMERICA

    The documented history of black emigration from Jamaica and other Caribbean islands into the United States dates back to 1619 when 20 voluntary indentured workers arrived in Jamestown, Virginia, on a Dutch frigate. They lived and worked as "free persons" even when a Portuguese vessel arrived with the first shipload of blacks enslaved in 1629. Since Jamaica was a major way station and clearing house for slaves en route to North America, the history of Jamaican immigration in the United States is inseparably tied to slavery and post-emancipation migration.
    After 1838, European and American colonies in the Caribbean with expanding sugar industries imported large numbers of immigrants to meet their acute labor shortage. Large numbers of Jamaicans were recruited to work in Panama and Costa Rica in the 1850s. After slavery was abolished in the United States in 1865, American planters imported temporary workers, called "swallow migrants," to harvest crops on an annual basis. These workers, many of them Jamaicans, returned to their countries after harvest. Between 1881 and the beginning of World War I, the United States recruited over 250,000 workers from the Caribbean, 90,000 of whom were Jamaicans, to work on the Panama Canal. During both world wars, the United States again recruited Jamaican men for service on various American bases in the region.

  • #2
    After many slave rebellions many of the slaves if not hung were sent to Honduras, this happened repeatedly biggest one was in 1760 Tacky rebellion where 600 rebels were sent to Honduras. Apparently the rebels negotiated the deal that they would give up if they were transported and not executed and believe it or not the English Jamaicans actually held to that deal. This came out of an uprising in Westmoreland that was sparked by the Tacky uprising in St Mary.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Stonigut View Post
      After many slave rebellions many of the slaves if not hung were sent to Honduras, this happened repeatedly biggest one was in 1760 Tacky rebellion where 600 rebels were sent to Honduras. Apparently the rebels negotiated the deal that they would give up if they were transported and not executed and believe it or not the English Jamaicans actually held to that deal. This came out of an uprising in Westmoreland that was sparked by the Tacky uprising in St Mary.

      You know your history, e-mail me at baljomo@aol.com for the link and I have another very interesting link for you.

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      • #4
        Baddest Jamaicans that went to Canada

        Originally posted by TDowl View Post
        You know your history, e-mail me at baljomo@aol.com for the link and I have another very interesting link for you.

        The first group of Jamaicans who came to Canada did so against their own will. However, they stood firm on their convictions and refused to be taken advantage of. West Indian slaves were imported into New France and Nova Scotia individually and in small numbers. However, the Maroons of Jamaica who entered Halifax in 1796 were the first large group to enter British North America (The Canadian Encyclopedia, 2000).
        The name Maroons was used to describe slaves who ran away from their owners and created free communities away from the European settlements in Jamaica. A war between the Maroons and the British broke out on the island of Jamaica in 1795. The war ended when the British realizing that they could not win, tricked the Maroons into laying down their arms and then carried them into exile in Nova Scotia (James & Walker, 1984).
        Governor John Wentworth settled the Maroons who numbered over 500 on the out skirts of Halifax and offered the men jobs to fortify the Citadel. Standing proud and still holding on to the memory of being betrayed by the British, the maroons mounted a strong resistance and refused to be compliant Nova Scotian settlers. After numerous appeals to London, the Maroons were allowed to return to Sierra Leone in West Africa in 1800. The “Maroon Bastion” stands on Citadel Hill as an example of their legacy and the sense of pride they contributed blacks remaining (James & Walker, 1984).
        The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

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        • #5
          Please put the info on the forum for all to read.
          Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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          • #6
            here is the Link - http://www.everyculture.com/multi/Ha...Americans.html

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Hortical View Post
              Please put the info on the forum for all to read.
              I read about this guy sometime ago, but this article confirm that he is deep - http://interestalert.com/story/06090..._american.html

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              • #8
                Champion Woman
                http://www.catcity-army.com/Motorcycle_Queen.php

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