Thursday, 26 March 2009

Featured collection: West India Committee rare books

George Wilson Bridges’ The Annals of Jamaica, a history of the West Indies and an apology for slavery, was published by John Murray in two volumes in London in 1827 and 1828.



Bridges (1788-1863) was an Anglican clergyman, but his move to Jamaica in 1816 took place under the shadow of scandal. He had been obliged to leave England after he fathered a son before marriage and eloped with the mother, Elizabeth Raby Brooks. In Jamaica, he took up the lucrative rectorship of St Ann’s parish.

Bridges had a chequered career in Jamaica. Although he had success serving as a mouthpiece for slave-owners and in persecuting Methodist missionaries on the island, in 1829 he was himself investigated for the savage beating of Kitty Hilton, his slave. The Jamaican council of protection, which exonerated him, was harshly criticised by Viscount Goderich, secretary of the Colonial Office, for failing to bring Bridges to account for the physical abuse. Bridges also provoked controversy with his Annals, where he discussed, among other things, the deportation from Jamaica of two free black men, Louise Celeste Descesne and John Escoffery. The book’s publisher, John Murray, was prosecuted in 1829 for libels against Descesne and Escoffery in the second volume, and Murray cooperated in the book’s recall and suppression.

This first edition, held by the Institute of Commonwealth Studies library, is interesting not only because of its rarity but also because it bears an inscription by its author. Bridges dedicates the book thus:

The unworthy Author, in / presenting this work to / Joseph Sharp / hopes that he may be / allowed to solicit his prayers / for one under the heavy hand / of an offended God – and / to subscribe himself his / afflicted friend / G W Bridges / Jamaica – 25th Feb: 1837.

Bridges’ melancholy references to his afflictions probably refer to the death of his four daughters in a boating accident on January 1, 1837. Bridges’ wife Elizabeth had left him in 1834, and was in England at the time of their death.

That same year, Bridges left for Canada with his surviving son, and after a five-year sojourn, returned to England. Bridges and his wife were never reconciled, but after her death, he explored the estrangement in a private publication entitled Outlines and Notes of Twenty-Nine Years, referring to the period between estrangement and Elizabeth’s death in 1862.

In addition to the Annals and Outlines, Bridges published several pro-slavery tracts. These included A Voice from Jamaica (1823), which argued against Wilberforce’s Appeal in favour of abolition, published earlier that year. He also published collections of his own photography.

The Annals of Jamaica is part of the West India Committee deposit, which was entrusted to the Institute of Commonwealth Studies on permanent loan from the Crown Agents in 1977.

Sources:

Anti-Slavery Monthly Reporter, London: for the London Society for the Abolition of Slavery, vol. 3, 1831.
Bridges, George Wilson, The Annals of Jamaica (2 vols.), London: John Murray, 1827-8.
Hannavy, John, ed., Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-century Photography, London: Routledge, 2008, s.v. “Bridges, Reverend George Wilson”.
Mitchell, Don, Mitchell’s West Indian Bibliography, 9th edition [ http://www.books.ai/ , accessed 19 March, 2009], s.v. “Bridges, George Wilson”, “Lushington, Stephen”, “Lescesne, Louis Celeste” and “Escoffery, John”.
Turner, Mary, Slaves and Missionaries: The Disintegration of Jamaican Slave Society, 1787-1834, Barbados: The Press University of the West Indies, 1998.

Wednesday, 4 March 2009

Books received in February 2009

Click to view all items added to the Reference Collection in February

Wednesday, 11 February 2009

Books received in the Library in January

Click to view all additions to the Reference Collection for January 2009

Monday, 9 February 2009

Society for Caribbean Studies Post-Doctoral Essay Prize

Researchers are reminded that the Society for Caribbean Studies Post-Doctoral Essay Prize deadline is February 28th 2009.

The SCS annual essay competition is open to postdoctoral scholars undertaking original research in the field of Caribbean Studies. The competition is funded by the British Academy Learned Societies Programme and forms part of the Joint Initiative for the Study of Latin America and the Caribbean (www.jislac.org.uk). The winning author will receive a cash prize of £500 and the paper will be published on the Society website. The winning paper may also be considered by the Editors for publication in the Bulletin of Latin American Research.

Papers should be submitted electronically to Clare Newstead at clare.newstead@ntu.ac.uk by 12 noon, 28th February 2009. Alternatively, three hard copies can be mailed, post-marked before noon on February 28th, to Clare Newstead at the address below.

Conditions of the competition:
* The subject of the paper should contribute to the advancement of Caribbean research * The author must have gained a PhD by the time of submission of the paper* The paper should not have been published or submitted for publication elsewhere * Previously submitted papers will not be accepted and former winners of the prize are not eligible to apply * Papers should be double-spaced and no more than 8,000 words in length (including notes, but excluding the bibliography). There are no strict rules about the format and style of the essay, but it should follow standard academic conventions.

The prize winner will be announced at the 2009 annual conference of the Society for Caribbean Studies at the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation, University of Hull, July 1-3.

Information is also available on the SCS website: http://www.caribbeanstudies.org.uk/bursariesPrizes/scsEssayPrize.htm

Tuesday, 3 February 2009

Snow update

All buildings of the University including the Institute of Commonwealth Studies Library will be open as normal today. Do take care if coming in as the snow is compacted in many areas coming in to the Institute and can be slippery.

Monday, 2 February 2009

ANZLAG workshop

The annual ANZLAG (Australia and New Zealand Library and Archives Group) workshop will be held on Friday 8th May 2009, and hosted by the Menzies Centre for Australian Studies at Kings College London. This is both advance notice and a call for presentations and papers.

We are interested in presentation on the following themes:
· Labour history
· Exploration and maps
· Notable library and archive collections in the UK and Europe

With relevance to Australia, New Zealand and/or the Pacific

Researchers, librarians and archivists are all encouraged to contact David Clover at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies (david.clover@sas.ac.uk) with suggested topics – and we would encourage anyone interested to get in touch.

Further details of programme and cost will be sent out once available

Snow

Owing to the adverse weather conditions and staff shortages, the Institute of Commonwealth Studies Library (and the Senate House Library) will close to users at 2.30pm today. We hope to be open tomorrow but please check our website or phone 020 7862 8842 before travelling.