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In 1729, Henry Lascelles returned to London from Barbados, and nine years later, purchased the land on which Harewood House would be built. Following Henry’s death in 1753, his son Edwin Lascelles (c.1713-1795), who was eventually created Baron Harewood, of Harewood Castle, inherited the estate and family fortune. Soon after, Edwin laid the foundation stone of Harewood House in 1759, which would be habitable by 1771.
As a result of the Lascelles family’s profits from the trade, as well as Henry and Edward Lascelles’ involvement in government contracts – both served as Customs Collectors in Bridgetown, Barbados – the Lascelles family were able to lend significant amounts of money to plantation owners, often in the form of mortgages. In the case of those who were unable to pay back their debts, the Lascelles family eventually acquired these plantations.
These foreclosures, partly prompted by a financial crisis in the Caribbean triggered by the American Revolution (1776-1783), meant that all property belonging to the planter transferred over to the Lascelles family, including enslaved people. It was through this venture that the Lascelles family emerged as planters and managers.
By the late 1780s, Edwin Lascelles owned nearly 30,000 acres across Barbados, Jamaica, Grenada and Tobago, becoming one of the largest land-owners in the Caribbean. Edwin owned or managed 24 plantations across these islands, with financial involvement with many others.
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British families profiting from the trade
The Lascelles were one of many prominent British families and individuals whose wealth stems from the Transatlantic trade of enslaved African people. It is estimated that tens of thousands of individuals, working across a range of sectors from trading and banking to investing and plantation ownership, were involved in the trade.
Other significant families who profited during this time in history include the Barings, a wealthy banking family in Britain who were heavily involved in the financing of the trade, particularly funding plantations.
Other families and individuals involved in the trade of enslaved people include the Wilberforce family – the family of William Wilberforce, who would go on to participate in the movement to abolish the trade, Edward Colston – a successful merchant and politician who was a member of The Royal Africa Company, and Sir William Cameron – an ancestor of former prime minister, David Cameron, who built his wealth from owning sugar plantations in the Caribbean.
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Brutality and Resistance
The lives and experiences of enslaved people who were forced to work on plantations are largely invisible in archives, though identities can be glimpsed in the names, ages, heritages, occupations and health conditions of those who are recorded in some surviving documents. Conditions on plantations were often horrendous, with enslaved people routinely overworked and forced to work in gruelling and harsh conditions. Living conditions were unsanitary, and food provisions were limited.
Enslaved people were mistreated, and brutal violence was also used. Life expectancy was low – between the ages of twenty and twenty-two – and more than half of all babies born into slavery died before the age of five. Ten per cent of babies born into slavery died before the age of ten.
Resistance amongst enslaved populations was strong, and several Lascelles family plantations were subject to uprisings. Many of those enslaved on the Mount and Thicket estates participated in Bussa’s Rebellion, a three-day uprising in 1816. The revolt was the largest in Barbadian history, echoing across the Caribbean and majorly contributing to the eventual abolition of slavery in the British Empire.
Following the abolition of slavery in 1833, and the subsequent emancipation of the British West Indies in 1838, Henry Lascelles, 2nd Earl of Harewood (1767-1841), received over £26,000 compensation (the value of the 1,227 enslaved people they had formerly owned). The Lascelles family sold the majority of their Caribbean plantations in the early nineteenth century. Another branch of the family sold the last remaining Lascelles plantation – Belle Estate in Barbados – in 1975.
Mount and Belle Estates
Photographs taken by Florence, 5th Countess of Harewood, on the Lascelles family's tour of the Caribbean in 1906.
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Acknowledge and Remember
Harewood House has strived to challenge its complex history in the 21st century, and has taken a number of actions to address its past, as well as encouraging other institutions to make amends for their role in the Transatlantic trade of enslaved African people.
Harewood House Trust have publicly acknowledged the family’s involvement in the trade, and have worked to highlight the lives of enslaved people who lived and worked on plantations owned by the family – working with archivists and historians to bring these stories to the fore, as well as recognising and celebrating descendants of enslaved African people living in Britain, such as award-winning actor and author David Harewood – whose ancestors were enslaved on a plantation in Barbados owned by the 2nd Earl of Harewood, as well as Dr Arthur France MBE, who founded the Leeds West Indian Carnival in 1967.
Dedicated to addressing the past
Harewood remains dedicated to addressing their past through educational programmes, exhibitions and events, as well as community and social engagement. Through these actions, and Harewood’s pledge to raise awareness of the local, national and global movements that seek restorative justice for enslaved people and their descendants, Harewood continues to work to address its past in order to imagine a better future.
Sources and further reading
A Bittersweet Heritage, Victoria Perry
Architecture of England, Scotland, and Wales, Nigel R. Jones
Slavery, Family and Gentry Capitalism in the British Atlantic, Simon Smith
The Transatlantic slave trade overview, BBC Bitesize
Diet and food production for enslaved Africans, Liverpool Museums
Recovering Identity in Harewood’s West Indian Archive, Olivia Wyatt
Slavery and Harewood House, BBC
The five Northallerton MPs from the same family who amassed a huge fortune in the slave trade, Northern Echo
Slavery and the British Country House, Historic England
‘The core of the Rebellion’: Harewood and the Barbadian Revolt, Olivia Wyatt
Slavery and the Building of Britain, BBC