Making sugar and slate: a labour history of the Pennant estates in Jamaica and North Wales 1765 - c.1900
dc.contributor.advisor
Paton, Diana
dc.contributor.advisor
Griffiths, Trevor
dc.contributor.author
Davies, Siân
dc.contributor.sponsor
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Scottish School of Graduate Study
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Harvard’s History of Economic Thought Fund
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Worlds of Related Coercion Action Group
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Society for the Study of Labour History
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dc.contributor.sponsor
School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
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dc.date.accessioned
2025-10-08T13:59:03Z
dc.date.available
2025-10-08T13:59:03Z
dc.date.issued
2025-10-08
dc.description.abstract
For over a hundred years, the Pennant family owned both sugar plantations in Jamaica and a slate quarry in North Wales. In 1765, when the family’s ownership of these disparate sites of labour first merged, their sugar plantations in Jamaica were well-established centres of industrial capitalism, while slate production on the Penrhyn estate in North Wales was emerging and capital poor. By the turn of the twentieth century, Penrhyn Quarry had become one of the largest slate quarries in the world, poised to cement its place in British industrial history with the three-year Penrhyn Lock Out. Meanwhile, the family’s sugar plantations had transitioned from enslaved and apprenticed labour to indentured and waged labour.
“Making Sugar and Slate” considers both locations of commodity production together
to reveal the bidirectional exchange of ideas and practices between these sites of labour owned by the same family. Thematic in structure, this thesis demonstrates that contestations over land, labour, family, debt, and freedom occurred in an interdependent dynamic between the Caribbean and Britain. Labour management ideas and practices crossed the Atlantic in both directions, and labourers’ struggles in one context influenced the Pennants’ actions in another. The material and the ideological connected the Pennants’ dual management position and the labouring communities of these disparate sites of labour. Separated by the Atlantic Ocean, the Pennant family’s estates in Jamaica and North Wales were constitutive elements of the labour history of racial capitalism.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/44031
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.rights.embargodate
2026-10-08
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dc.subject
Pennant family
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dc.subject
sugar plantations
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dc.subject
Jamaica
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dc.subject
slate working
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dc.subject
North Wales
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dc.subject
Penrhyn estate
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dc.subject
slate quarries
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dc.subject
indentured labour
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enslaved labour
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dc.subject
racial capitalism
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dc.title
Making sugar and slate: a labour history of the Pennant estates in Jamaica and North Wales 1765 - c.1900
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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dcterms.accessRights
RESTRICTED ACCESS
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