How Harvey River became Harvey River. For all we know, the village of Harvey River used to have another name, but when my mother’s paternal grandfather and his brother founded it in 1840, the old name was lost forever. The Harvey River was the source of life to everyone in the village. It was named by David’s father, William Harvey, and his brother John, two of five brothers named Harvey who had come from England, sometime during the early half of the nineteenth century. They were related to one Thomas Harvey, a Quaker who had come to Jamaica in 1837, along with Joseph Sturge, the two men later writing a powerful and moving account of slavery in the British West Indies. The other Harvey brothers split up and went to live in different parishes in Jamaica after their arrival; only William and John stayed together. One version is that the two took up jobs as bookkeepers on the San Flebyn sugar estate, but one day soon after their arrival they witnessed something that made them decide to abandon all ideas about joining the plantocracy.
The estate overseer had hired two new Africans fresh off the boat in Lucea Harbour. Although slavery was officially abolished in 1838, some Africans were now being brought to Jamaica, along with East Indians and Chinese, to work as indentured labourers on sugar plantations where production was severely affected by the loss of slave labour.
Among the new Africans was a set of twins from Liberia, the great-grandchildren of fighting Maroons who had been transported there from Jamaica after the Maroon War in 1795. These fierce fighters had been banished to Nova Scotia in Canada, and had later settled in Liberia. The twin boys had grown up hearing many tales of Jamaica and of the courage of their ancestors, runaway Africans who refused to accept the yoke of slavery. The twins even claimed to be related to the supreme warrior woman, Nanny of the Maroons. Grandy Nanny, as I have heard some Maroons call her, had led her people in a protracted guerrilla war against the British until they were forced to make peace with her, on her terms.
These two young men had chosen to travel to Jamaica from Liberia on a one-year contract as indentured labourers, mainly to see for themselves the green and mountainous land to which their foreparents always longed to return. Maroon Country, where places had sinister and coded names like “Me No Send, You No Come.”
They stood like twin panthers on the docks at Lucea, with such a fierce, mesmerizing presence that the overseer of the San Flebyn estate, one Grant Elbridge, felt compelled to hire them as a matching pair. He did this partly with his own amusement in mind, for he and his wife often indulged in elaborate sex games with the Africans on the property. One week after he hired them, Elbridge announced that the twins had to be whipped, abolition of slavery or not, for who the hell were these goddamned twin savages to disobey and disrespect him? The night before, when he had summoned them to his overseer’s quarters, and he and his wife had indicated to them that they wanted them to take off their clothes, the two, acting as one, had spit in his face and stalked out into the dark night.
So Elbridge ordered the twins to take off their shirts again, this time in the middle of the cane field, and the twins obeyed at once. They tore off their shirts and bared their chests to him before the other labourers who now worked under conditions that were hardly better than before their emancipation. The huge, dark eyes of the twins locked onto Elbridge.
The Harvey brothers, who had been ordered by Elbridge to leave their bookkeeping and come down into the cane piece to watch him in his words “tan the hide off these heathen savages,” stood close to each other and watched sick to their stomachs as the long, thick strip of cowhide lashed across the backs of the Maroons, raising raw, bloody welts. But they became truly terrified when they saw that it was Elbridge who bawled and bellowed in pain. The whip dropped from his hand and coiled loosely like a harmless yellow snake when he fell, face down, in the cane field. The Maroon twins seemed to have mastered the “bounce back” techniques of Nanny, who was able to make bullets ricochet off her body back at the British soldiers. Just as the bullets had bounced off Nanny’s body into the flesh of the soldiers, so too did the twins redirect Elbridge’s chastisement onto him. As Elbridge screamed and writhed in pain, the Harveys watched as the Liberian twins walked out of the cane piece and turned their faces in the direction of the Cockpit Country, knowing that no one would ever find them once they disappeared into Maroon territory. After witnessing this, the Harveys resigned their jobs as bookkeeping clerks on the San Flebyn estate and decided to find some land to make a life for themselves.
In the spirit of true conquistadors, William and John Harvey had come across a small clearing up in the Hanover Hills on a Sunday as they combed the area outside the estate in search of a place to settle themselves. It was not far from a place named Jericho and the entire area was cool and scented by pimento or “allspice” bushes. They did not know it then, but in the years to come, almost all the world’s allspice would come from the island of Jamaica.
Tall bamboo trees bowed and bumped their feathery heads together to create flexible, swaying arches, and here and there solid dark blocks of shale jutted up from the ground in strange Stonehenge-like formations. On close examination, they saw that the rocks had bits of seashells embedded in them, so it is fair to say that at some point that area must have been under the sea. The clearing was verdant green and watered by a strong, coursing river. They had reached it by following one of the paths leading away from the estate. These paths had been created by the feet of men and women fleeing from the beatings and torture that was their only payment for making absentee landlords some of the richest men in the world. “Rich as a West Indian Planter” was a common saying when sugar was king during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Some of those paths led to small food plots often set on stony hillsides, which amazingly had been cultivated by the enslaved Africans to feed themselves. At the end of fourteen-hour working days cultivating cane, and on Sundays, their one day off, they had planted vegetables like pumpkins, okras, dasheens, plantains, and yams, the food of their native Africa. For some reason, the soil of the parish of Hanover produced the best yams known to the palate. The moon-white Lucea yam was surely the monarch of all yams, my mother always said. Every time she cooked and served Lucea yam, she would tell us the same story that Jamaica’s first prime minister, Sir Alexander Bustamante, who was himself a native of Hanover and a man who claimed to have been descended from Arawak Indians, would say that “Lucea yam is such a perfect food that it can be eaten alone, with no fish nor meat.” She too subscribed to the belief that the Lucea yam needed nothing, no accompanying “salt ting,” as the Africans referred to pickled pig or beef parts, dried, salted codfish, shad, and mackerel which was imported by estate owners as protein for their diet.
The clearing, which was later to become the village of Harvey River, was near the hillside plots farmed by some of the formerly enslaved Africans, many of whom now worked as hired labourers on nearby estates. The two Harvey brothers decided to “settle” the land, and, giddy at the prospect of imitating men like Christopher Columbus, Walter Raleigh, and Francis Drake, they named the river after themselves. They had spent the night sleeping on its banks, having come upon the place towards evening.
“Do you think this river has a name?” said William.
“Aye, it has one now,” said John.
They had bathed in it, and caught fat river mullets and quick dark eels which they roasted on stones. Then they had fallen asleep to the sound of the rush of the waters they now called by their name.
The Harvey brothers built their first small house of wattles and daub. Later they built a larger house of mahogany, cedar, and stone. Then William had sent for his wife, Lily, and his six children whom he had left behind in London when he and his brother had come to Jamaica. Nobody knows where their money came from, but they were able to acquire considerable property in the area, and to live independently for the rest of their days.
In time the village grew. Grocery shops were established, there were at least two rum bars, a church, and a school. But no matter who came to live there, the Harveys were considered to be the first family of the village. And when the government built a bridge over a section of the Harvey River and tried to name it after some minor colonial flunky, William Harvey himself went and took down the government’s sign and erected a sign of his own saying Harvey Bridge.
He was a tall, big-boned man
the earth shuddered under his steps
but the caught-quiet at his centre
pulled peace to him like a magnet.
Whenever she spoke of her paternal grandfather, my mother would say that he was one of the biggest, tallest, quietest men that anybody had ever met. Actually, because she had a love for imagery, she would say something like, “When he walked, the ground would shake, but he was silent as a lamb, a giant of a man with a still spirit.” True or not, there was something remarkable about the character of William Harvey, who was one of the few Englishmen in his time to legally marry a black Jamaican woman. By all accounts he was a very moral man who would not have countenanced living in sin with Frances Duhaney. He took her as his legal wife in the Lucea Parish Church, and none of his English neighbours attended the wedding. Some of them even cautioned him that black women were only fit to be concubines. William’s response to that particular piece of advice was that any woman who was good enough to share his bed was good enough for him to marry.
He married her after his English wife died and left him with six children. He went on to have six more children with Frances Duhaney–Tom, Frances, George, James, Martha, and my grandfather David–and from all accounts he cared for them all, from the blond, blue-eyed Edward born from his first wife to the dark, Indian-looking David and all the others of varying skin shades in between. He gave each of them equal amounts of land, which he surveyed himself, and he encouraged them to read and to love the books he had brought with him from England. He was known on occasion to chase outsiders from Harvey River, and if, as I suspect, those outsiders were dark-skinned like his own wife, then I’m not sure what that says about the very moral character of William Harvey except that he was deeply complicated and flawed like most people.
William had chosen Frances Ann Duhaney as his future wife when he went one day to the village of Jericho to purchase a pig and some chickens from her father. My great-grandfather seemed to have been a man of clear and unequivocal feelings. According to my mother, he identified my great-grandmother as his second wife from the first time that he laid eyes upon her.
Frances Ann Duhaney, called “Nana” as a sign of respect after her marriage, was a fine-featured woman with jet-black skin. Her surname, Duhaney, probably meant that her African grandfather had been owned by the Duhaney family, proprietors of the Point Estate at the eastern end of Hanover. The original form of their name was de Henin, from the descendants of Phillip de Henin of the Netherlands.
William Harvey had spotted the beautiful young girl moving efficiently about her father’s yard. In the hour or two that it took William to buy the pig and some chickens from Mr. Duhaney, he noticed how lightly the young girl moved, how effortlessly she performed her tasks, feeding the chickens, sweeping up the yard, building a fire, disappearing and reappearing in no time bearing a pail of water drawn from the river, peeling yams and dasheens and feeding the peels to the pigs. Her face was so serene throughout, her high smooth forehead never breaking a sweat. It seemed to him that she hummed a low and compelling tune all the time, like a worker bee. Her lips were a shade darker than the rest of her face, as though she had been suckled on the juice of some sweet, energizing black berry. He had asked her father for her hand in marriage.
Soon the young girl was moving swiftly, silently, and efficiently about the Harvey house on bare feet. She rarely wore shoes inside her house. It was as if she needed her soles to always be in touch with the powerful work energy issuing up from the Hanover ground through the floorboards, the same energy that enabled labourers to perform the ferocious, back-breaking tasks involved in the production of sugar cane; an endless cycle of digging, planting, weeding, cutting, grinding, and boiling under the ninety-six-degrees-in-the-shade sun, and the cut of the whip. Nana Frances pulled that same work energy up through the soles of her feet, and that allowed her to work tirelessly. William always said that it was not just her beauty, but her silence, devotion, loyalty, and capacity for hard work that drew him to her.
Nana Frances would get up early every morning, after only a few hours’ sleep, to make big country breakfasts or “morning dinners” of roasted yams and breadfruit, bammies made from grated cassava, fried plantains, fried eggs, stewed liver, kidneys, and light, and escoveitched fish, washed down with quarts of coffee and chocolate tea. William was a big man who liked his food. She knew that, and she liked to cook for him and his trenchermen children. She would wash huge hampers of laundry in the river, beating the clothes clean on the river stones, washing linen as white as the proverbial Fullers soap. She kept the big wooden house clean, staining what seemed like acres of mahogany floors with red oxide and burnishing them with a club-shaped coconut brush. She dusted and polished the heavy mahogany furniture with cedar oil, she cleaned the ornate silver cutlery with ashes taken from the belly of the iron stove, and she used the pulp of sour Seville oranges to shine the copper and brass utensils. Crouched on her hands and knees, she moved across the floors, her small calloused hands beating out a Johnny Cooper rhythm: Joh-nny Coo-per, Johnny Coo-per…that was the scansion and sound of the coconut brush beating out its domestic rhythm on the planks of the wooden floor. She starched and ironed clothes with small triangular-faced irons made by the local blacksmith, irons that were heated on wood or coal fires. She was forever bending over some source of heat or water, to iron, cook, set steaming plates of food before the big-boned Harvey men, proud of her reputation as a hard worker. She seemed to like it when people said, “She can work you see!” But she never encouraged her own daughters to work like that. She always told them, “I work enough for everybody already, you go and study your book.” So when her son David married Margaret Wilson, Nana Frances advised the new bride to hire a maid to help her with her housework. Above all, she cautioned, “Don’t go and wash clothes in the river. Get somebody to do that for you. Don’t make these people think you are ordinary.”
Her eldest son, Tom, took Nana’s admonitions against ordinariness very seriously. He had been sent to Rusea’s High School in Lucea, but growing bored with the dry curriculum that was imported without modification from English public schools, he took to skipping school and going to listen to the cases being tried in the Lucea courthouse. In time he persuaded his younger brother David to cut school and join him. At home they began to study the law books that their father had brought with him from England, and after a while they both knew enough law to be able to give effective legal advice to the poor and defenceless of Hanover. David’s talents lay more with civil cases. He was a gifted writer who wrote many letters on behalf of people unable to do so. He had a way of choosing appropriate phrases, for selecting the right words to express the plight of some poor, wronged person. Tom’s talents lay more with criminal cases which he would “try” the night before the actual case, using his brothers and sisters as the accused, as witnesses, and as members of the jury.
“Go to my son Tom and my son David, they will tell you what to tell the judge.” Nana, proud that her sons were not ordinary, was forever recommending her sons’ village lawyer practice to any wronged person. Their reputation, no doubt helped by their mother’s tireless word-of-mouth promotion, grew to the point where the local judges issued an order banning them from practising within a five-mile radius of the courthouse. So Tom and David set up office under a Lignum Vitae tree with its masses of lavender blossoms, exactly five miles from the Lucea courthouse. Dressed like most men of their time, in dark trousers and white shirts and wearing felt hats, they stationed themselves under the spreading branches of the national tree of Jamaica while poor people, many of them walking barefoot, came to them for help. Many is the time David Harvey gave his own clean shirt laundered by his mother, Nana Frances, to some poor man to enable him to stand with dignity before a hard-eyed judge. My mother’s father and her uncle instructed hundreds of people how to defend themselves against the British colonial laws that valued the smallest piece of property over the life of any ex-slave, and David went home sometimes without his shirt because he knew how the law judged by appearances.
O to hear him sing the lake Isle of Innisfree,
now become Harvey River, near Lucea.
“Down by the Sally Gardens.” My mother used to sing that song in a funny short-of-breath style, and looking back now I realize how many Irish words and phrases like “cute hooer,” referring to a deceptive man or woman, were part of the language of the Harveys. They must have picked their Irishness up from the sailor who jumped ship in the Lucea Harbour and fathered my maternal grandmother with a woman of African descent who became the Guinea Woman in the poems and stories I would come to write.
The sailor was George O’Brian Wilson, who first saw Leanna Sinclair, mother of Margaret Wilson Harvey, when he went to call upon an Irish penkeeper on a sugar estate in the neighbouring parish of Westmoreland. He had jumped ship in the Lucea Harbour at the sight of the magnificent blue-green mountains of Western Jamaica. “The fairest isle that eyes ever beheld,” is how Columbus had described this island. The intensely green landscape reminded George Wilson of parts of Ireland, but the weather here was much better, with its almost always hot, energizing sun and the warm clear blue seas with white sand beaches. Paradise. When he abandoned ship he took with him one thing, a woollen suit that had been woven and tailored by his own father. The wool had been dyed “rich black” by soaking it for a time in a boghole, then oiling it with goose grease before weaving it. That suit lasted him for his entire life, and he was buried in it.
George O’Brian Wilson was even more determined to stay in Jamaica once he landed and began to enjoy the rum bars and brothels of the small seaside town. This was the ideal place for men like him, and every white person he met seemed to have come to Jamaica to run away from some dark secret. No man gave a straight answer to any questions about his past life. So he let the ship sail without him and set about trying to locate and form alliances with other Irishmen, who gave him this advice: find and marry the daughter of some local Creole.
Whites born in Jamaica were not considered white by the English, because by now there was so much mixing of white and black blood; with so many black women giving birth to “sailor pickney,” light-skinned children and jet-black children walking around with “good hair,” Aryan features, and eyes the colour of semi-precious stones. Creole families needed to find white husbands for their daughters, for one day they all hoped to escape this place where they were outnumbered by Negroes and return to “the mother country,” which many of them had never seen but which they nonetheless regarded as home.
It was not difficult for the Irish sailor to find a wealthy bride from one of these “anxious-to-upgrade-their-colour” families. Less than six months after he let the ship return to Ireland without him, he became a married man with property, the dowry of his Creole bride. Not long after his marriage, he went to visit another Irishman who worked as a penkeeper on a sugar estate in Grange, Westmoreland. It was there that he first saw Leanna Sinclair.
She was sixteen years old, just over five feet tall, and her skin was the colour of onyx. She had wide, amazed-looking eyes and a dusting of tiny warts that looked like beads of jet along the top of her cheeks, which is why she was called a Guinea woman. She was standing sideways when he first saw her, her face turned in the direction of the sea, standing on one leg like a Masai warrior or an egret, her other leg tucked up behind her. Her thick hair was hidden under a white headkerchief, and she gazed intently out to sea even as she served them. George Wilson began to fear that she would drop the tray with the glasses of planters’ punch called sangaree, and grow wings and fly straight over their heads as they sat there in their leather-backed planters’ chairs on the wide verandah. He grew afraid that she would fly back to Africa before he got a chance to clasp her strange, wild beauty to him, and in that instant he became completely convinced that she possessed something that he needed in order to live, some powerful life force which he had to catch and absorb into him to enable him to make his way in Jamaica. He needed to cover her and be ready to catch it when it escaped from her throat as an ellipse of light. His fellow Irishman laughed when Wilson told him about how affected he was by the sight of this girl. “And you a newly married man and all!”
George Wilson, who would always refer to Jamaica as being “behind God’s back,” enjoyed parallel honeymoons. His efforts eventually produced Margaret Aberdeen Wilson, as he named her–he insisted on the Aberdeen but never explained why–who was born with his fair complexion, grey-blue eyes, and long straight black hair; and another daughter, Mary, who was born a few months before Margaret to his lawfully wedded wife and looked like nobody he knew. George Wilson grew to love the child Margaret more than he ever loved any other human being in his life.
One day when Margaret was a small girl, her father had called her his “little neega,” which was probably his Irish pronunciation of “negro,” and the child told him, “If me a neega, you a neega too, for you is my father, you a white neega.” And that was true. He was much more in tune with the ways of the poor black Jamaican people than he was with the imitation English manners of the Creole class into which he had married. He had little or none of the graces of the well-to-do. As the head of his new family, he was expected to behave like a member of the colonial ruling class, having to sit at table at night with the local gentry of Lucea, who talked about the “lazy, dirty Negroes” in much the same way that they spoke about the “lazy, dirty Irish” in England. He was much more at ease drinking in the small, dark wattle-and-daub rum shops with the thatched roofs which looked like the thatched sod and stone huts of his native county Galway, and he loved the robust African rhythms of the native music. He himself played a wicked fiddle and could sing so that it brought tears to the eyes. He would tell Margaret stories about Ireland, about the little people and the leprechauns. In turn the child would tell him stories told to her by her mother, about the trickster spider man, Anancy, from West Africa, and duppy stories about rolling calves. Wilson grew to admire Anancy’s wily ways and he told her that Buddam, the village ne’er-do-well who was always being arrested by the village pan-head (which is what Jamaicans called district constables) for beating up people, had the strength of the mythical Irish warrior, Cuchulain.
When he grew old, George Wilson abandoned his family in Lucea, and came to live with Margaret in Harvey River in the small house that she and David built for him. In Harvey River, he plied his trade as a shoemaker and saddler, and my mother loved to tell the story of how he once made a pair of boots for a woman from the nearby village of Jericho. When he delivered the boots to the woman, he told her that the leather was rather tough, and that she should oil the boots before she wore them in order to soften them. He said this in his rich Irish brogue, and to the woman’s West African ears the advice to oil her boots came out sounding like “boil your boots.” She promptly went home, made up a roaring fire, put on a large cauldron of water, and boiled the boots until they shrank, so that they looked like footwear fit only for a small cloven-footed animal.
She returned to George Wilson in a great rage, insisting that he had told her to “bwile” her boots. He insisted that he had rightly told her to “aile” them, and then he probably told her that she should get her “bleddy eegnorant arse” the hell away from his shop before he shied his lapstone at her. The woman was thereafter called “Bwile boot, me tell you fi aile it, you bwile it” by the village children. My mother’s people love beautiful shoes. In every photograph ever taken of the Harveys, they are wonderfully shod, no doubt a taste they acquired from George Wilson.
My great-grandmother was a Guinea woman. It seemed that, at best, Leanna Sinclair’s feelings towards George O’Brian Wilson were mixed. While she was pleased by his attentions, she always felt as if her life’s breath was being cut off when he covered her, and so she closed herself off tightly whenever he approached. She bore him two children, my mother’s mother, Margaret, and a boy to whom he gave his own name, George, but who died when he was an infant. To capture her heart he tried flattery. “By Christ y’are the loveliest ting I’ve ever laid eye on.”
“But you hate Jesus Christ, you tell me so youself, how you going swear by him and me believe you?”
He gave her gifts.
“I bought some ting for you, a fine red dress.”
“I don’t wear red. Plenty African get catch because them was wearing red and that is how them see them to catch them.”
“Shut your focking mout and just do what I tell you.”
George Wilson never did get to ingest that part of Leanna’s soul which he visualized as a rim of light, no matter how hard he tried to make her cry out so that it would detach itself from her soul-case and float through her open throat into his mouth. He never did get to possess Leanna because she could always see far and she knew that George O’Brian Wilson was not her true love. If she appeared to be looking out to sea the first time that George Wilson saw her, it was because she was seeing a ship, perhaps it might even have been the one that was bringing those twin brothers to Jamaica. Leanna was able to recognize other people who could see far in this way, they always looked past you. Mostly they looked up to the sky. If they looked into your eyes, they often looked quickly away because they could see things about you that they did not want to have to see. Who wanted to be seeing people with perfectly good-looking faces change into animals when you looked at them? Or hear greedy people grunting, when to the ears of others they were speaking in dulcet tones?
One night when she was twelve years old, Leanna dreamt that she was one of the Africans packed into the hold of a slaver. In her dream, she was crouched and chained, wedged tightly against the bodies of other Africans squatting in their own excrement. The smell and the thick darkness in the hold was like no other darkness or smell in creation. It was shit and sulphur and the raw and rancid sweat of human fear, and aloes and bitters and the vile essence of degradation. The foul stinking air was rent by the hoarse cries of people calling out to different gods in many different tongues, calling upon ogun and shango and damballah, gods of iron and lightning and war, to fling down ancient curses upon their captors. Curses as old as the world itself. Curses employed by the first man and the first woman who suffered at the hands of other crazed beings who had flown past their nests, transgressors of the sacred law: do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Curses invoked by King David and King Rameses against their enemies. “Tear them from limb to limb, dash them against the rocks, smite them hip and thigh, maim and blind them, may their tongues cleave to the roofs of their mouths. May their own children suck out their eyes, their life breath, may dogs eat their entrails…”
And one or two more pious ones amongst them were praying to more compassionate gods to send mercy rain to soften the hearts of their captors, men who would reduce human beings to beast-state for the sake of gold and silver shekels and Cain’s profit. Suddenly, in the midst of this terrible place, the people gradually became conscious of music being played. A music which took its rhythm from the waves on which the ship of darkness rode, a rhythm which rocked out and returned to its centre, conducting in its wake and movements the peace that passeth understanding. And for what seemed like an eternity, but was in fact only a few minutes, silence settled over the slaver. In later years, Jamaicans would call this beat Rocksteady.
Leanna had started to see the man who would become the love of her life just about the time that she entered puberty, and in her visions he was always walking towards her. Sometimes she would not see him for months and then she would be doing her domestic work up at the Irish penkeeper’s house, polishing a mahogany table, and she would see an image of a young man, not too tall, but with strong legs and big hands, appear up through the wood grain of the table. For years she saw his image. Sometimes he would be walking across high blue mountains with people who looked like his mother and father, another time he would be making his way through cane fields, and sometimes he was walking by the sea. Once, he was lying down on the cold ground, looking up at the stars, gazing up at the constellation which looked like a big gourd in the sky, wishing for a drink of star water. Sometimes the young man was crouched down with the people who looked like his parents, hiding from someone or something in the bushes. But one thing was certain, he was coming towards her. And because Leanna knew this man was coming, she kept her heart tightly closed whenever George Wilson was near, so that he eventually grew tired of trying to make her yield up her essence to him.
After the trouble,
some with the name Bogle
catch fraid like sickness
and take panic for the cure.
John Bogle’s people had found their way to the parish of Westmoreland after the Morant Bay Uprising, in 1865, when John’s relative Paul Bogle–to whom he bore a remarkable resemblance–was hanged. Paul Bogle preached and he walked to petition the representatives of the British Colonial government on behalf of the starving people who were turned loose after emancipation and given nothing. No land, no money, no forty acres, not even one mule. The planters were compensated for loss of human property, but the men and women who had worked to build the great wealth of the British ruling class received not one farthing. On August 1, 1838, their first morning of full freedom, many of them had walked away from the estates carrying not even a simple hoe with which to till the ground. The ones who chose to stay worked for the lowest possible wages, out of which they then had to pay the estate owners for their keep. Then the sugar industry collapsed. Money was scarce and taxes high. Disease and famine, cholera and smallpox, claimed more than fifty thousand lives and then, like an additional Biblical plague, came drought. Domestic food crops began to fail year after year. Add to that a justice system that as a rule dispensed no justice to the majority of Jamaicans, a system administered by the estate owners and managers who were full of vengeance and wrath over the loss of their human property.
Paul Bogle, a child of enslaved parents, was a prosperous small farmer from Stony Gut in the parish of St. Thomas. Deacon Paul could speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but he was also a man of deeds. He led a delegation on a forty-five-mile walk from Stony Gut to Spanish Town to see Governor John Eyre, and draw his attention to the suffering, but the Governor refused to meet with them. George William Gordon was among the men of property who sympathized with the people’s suffering. The son of a slave woman and a Scottish planter, he had worked hard to educate himself and had been elected to the Legislative Assembly in 1844. Bogle and Gordon, Baptists both, tried to petition the Colonial government on behalf of the beleaguered people. They tried and tried the peaceful way. They walked, they wrote petitions, even to the Queen herself. For their efforts they got a letter from Queen Victoria, which recommended the starving landless Jamaican people practise industry, thrift, hard work, and obedience.
Governor Eyre ordered Paul Bogle and George William Gordon to be hanged for leading the uprising that we were taught in school was the “Morant Bay Rebellion.” Some four hundred desperate people stormed the courthouse in Morant Bay and clashed with the local volunteer guards. Twenty-one men, mostly white, were killed. More than six hundred ex-slaves were executed and as many flogged in response to the uprising. A dispatch from Col. J.H.F. Elkington to the commander in the field went as follows. “Hole is doing splendid service all about Manchioneal and shooting every black man who cannot account for himself. Nelson at Port Antonio is hanging like fun by court martial. I hope that you will not send any black prisoners. Do punish the blackguards well.” One month after, the Morant Bay River in St. Thomas was still stinking, polluted from the number of corpses floating in it.
After the Morant Bay Uprising, to say that your name was Bogle was to sign your own death warrant. Some of the surviving Bogles coined protective variations of their great name, such as Bogues, Boggis, and Bogey. John Bogle and his parents had walked across the island from St. Thomas to Hanover, removing themselves as much as was possible from what happened in St. Thomas. As far as the east is from the west, John’s family travelled to the parish of Hanover, trying to keep their lives and to keep the great name of Bogle alive. But ironically they ended up being called Buddle instead of Bogle by many Hanover people. And one Sunday in 1875, as sure as fate, Leanna was walking towards the town of Savanna la Mar, and walking towards her on the main road was the same man she had been seeing in her dreams, leading a big grey mule. She began to laugh as she recognized him, and he began to laugh even louder. They met in the middle of the road, and he said to her, “If you was my missus, I wouldn’t make you walk. I would give you this nice grey mule.” From that day, they never lived apart, until John Bogle died. They lived, farmed, and flourished in Grange, Westmoreland, and Leanna rode her grey mule, wore her money jewellery, necklaces and bracelets fashioned from silver coins soldered together, and lived a happy, prosperous life. When her mother married John Bogle, Margaret, who was six years old, told him, “You not my father.” He said, “I know, but I am the man who will honour your mother.”
“Me meet the man who intend to put him ring pon mi finger.”
That is how Leanna Sinclair announced to George O’Brian Wilson that she was ending their relationship.
George Wilson, who had by then lost all interest in getting Leanna to surrender completely to him, said:
“Fock! So you’re to be married then…well, way you go, just you have my Meg dressed, ready and waiting outside every Sattiday morning, for I’ll not be setting foot in your goddamn yard ever again. I’ll bring her back by nightfall…Oh, don’t imagine tis you who’s leaving me, truth is, I’ve no further use for you!” George Wilson never spoke directly to Leanna again. He did not feel any need to. She had given him what he needed to make his way in Jamaica. She had given him Margaret.