Sugar-cane cutters in Jamaica, Caribbean

E9087

Sugar-cane cutters in Jamaica, Caribbean Long Caption: Albumen print. Part of the Michael Graham-Stewart slavery collection (Mounted with ZBA2613; with another photograph above, 'W.I. Band') These two photographs show life in Jamaica in the latter part of the nineteenth century. The sugar industry, although in decline in this period, did not end with the emancipation of slaves in 1838. Instead it continued, with black people becoming employees rather than slaves. As these images suggest, however, emancipation did not bring equality, nor did it end the rigours of working in the cane fields. This failure on the part of plantation owners and the colonial governments significantly to improve the day-to-day conditions and rights of ex-slaves and their descendents provoked resentment, and occasionally rebellion, among people in the Caribbean. Credit line: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London. Object: ZBA2612 Artist: unknown Date: circa 1880 Medium: albumen print Size: 175 mm x 227 mm Click here to buy a bespoke print of this image.