Associated People (9) |
The dates listed below have different categories as denoted by the letters in the brackets following each date. Here is a key to explain those letter codes:
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1792 [SY] - → Mortgage Holder
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1792 [SY] - → Mortgage Holder
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1792 [SY] - → Mortgage Holder
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1807 [SY] - → Not known
Shown in the context of indentures of 1807 as transferees of mortgages in trust. |
1807 [SY] - → Not known
Shown in the context of indentures of 1807 as transferees of mortgages in trust. |
- 1807 [EY] → Not known
Shown as transferor of mortgage securities in trust |
- 1807 [EY] → Not known
Shown as transferor of mortgage securities in trust |
- 1807 [EY] → Not known
Shown as transferor of mortgage securities in trust |
- 1807 [EY] → Not known
Shown as transferor in trust of mortgage securities |
Notes |
A sugar estate in Charlotte, St Vincent, mortgaged in 1792 and apparently changing hands in 1807 but not yet traced in the Slave Registers |
Sources |
https://eap.bl.uk/sites/default/files/legacy-eap/downloads/eap345_survey.pdf |
Estate Information (1) |
1807
[Name] Camacarabou
[Crop] Sugar [?] f. 1: Entered 20 February 1809 Messrs Plummer &Co to Messrs Richard and Robert Shawe Transfer of mortgage securities in trust Indenture made 12 Sept 1807 between Thomas Plummer, John Foster Barham, Thomas William Plummer and John Plummer (all of London) merchants and co‐partners of the one part and Richard Shawe (Dulwich Hill, Surrey) and Robert Shawe (New Bridge Street, City of London) of the other part. They sell to the Shawes Camacarabou plantation, Charlotte parish, Saint Vincent. 150 acres. Formerly the property of James Balmer. A sugar estate. Transferred for the sum of 5 shillings apiece. This was a grant of the reversion of freehold and inheritance to them. f. 2‐27: Followed by an indenture of release of four parts already prepared. Dated 14 September 1807. Between Thomas Plummer, John Foster Barham, Thomas William Plummer and John Plummer (all of London), merchants and co‐partners of the first part, Brooke Taylor Ottley and John Brown (of Dublin), merchants and co‐partners of the second part, Richard Shawe (Dulwich Hill, Surrey), esquire, and Robert Shawe (New Bridge Street, City of London), esquire, of the third part, and William Le Blanc (New Bridge Street), esquire of the fourth part. Refers back to a release and assignment dated 24 October 1792 of seven parts between Alexander Burrowes, Irwin Drewry Ottley and Joseph Warner of the first part, Robert Paul and Thomas Morgan of the second part, Thomas Boddington, Samuel Boddington and Thomas Bettesworth, then merchants and co‐ partners in trade of the third part, John Warren and Henry Jackson of the fourth part, James Gerald Morgan and John Mills Jackson (both of Saint Vincent), esquires, of the fifth part, Edward Jackson (then residing in the City of London), esquire of the sixth part and Ambrose Weston of the seventh part. All relating to Camacarabou plantation (see above). Morgan and Jackson had borrowed £6,000 from the Boddingtons and Bettesworth. A bond was drawn up between these parties to secure the repayment. (etc.)
https://eap.bl.uk/sites/default/files/legacy-eap/downloads/eap345_survey.pdf
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