23rd May 1836 | 166 Enslaved | £3460 10s 6d
Parliamentary Papers p. 190.
Kathleen Mary Butler, The Economics of Emancipation: Jamaica and Barbados 1823-1843 (Chapel Hill and London, University of North Carolina Press, 1995) pp. 102-4: Mary Lovell and Ann Grassett inherited the estate (Chancery Lane) from their brother, William Yard, mortgagee of Renn Hamden and John Hamden (Renn Dickson Hampden (q.v.) was Mary Lovell's son-in-law). Mary Lovell and Ann Grassett were resident at the time, but Mary Lovell moved to England and died in 1843.
T71/555 p.177: enslaved persons were registered in 1834 by Forster Clarke, as attorney to Mary Lovell and Ann Grassett.
Colony
Barbados
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Claim No.
3394A & B
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Estate
Chancery Lane
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Collected by
Moody, Thos (A); Clarke, Forster (B)
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Awardee
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Awardee
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