Have a good lie in - I really am on holiday - it always did take a week or so to relax and unwind!
Vivid dream:- I go back down to the British Cemetery and I ask to borrow the Registers which contain the lists of those buried there. I was given a venerable and vulnerable leather bound book with pages made of parchment; it was so very precious. The cemetery and chapel were both undergoing extensive renovations, with dust and dirt, workmen and cement and tools everywhere. It was a general builders' site. I am holding this wonderful treasure of an old book which seems alive with its hidden knowledge waiting to be explored. I wander around the rubble, rebuilding and muddle with the book in my hands. I am looking for a safe place to open it. I awake = end of dream.
I go back down to the British Cemetery, ring the bell at the door and I am let in. I ask to see the Registers. The Janitor takes me to the little room (and opens what looks like a very C of E church safe) where the registers are kept - or rather the copies. Someone has typed up the entries and everything is in a new folio. We easily find the entries for GE and JWH .
I then ask to see if we can find anyone with the name of Phelps and an interesting entry springs up....
James Phelps, a Black, for upwards of 60 years a household servant in the family of Joseph Phelps, Merchant of this place, said to be aged 74 years, died in this Island of Madeira on the 19th and was interred in the Old British Burial Ground on the 20th day of March 1838.... I am quite shocked in an odd sort of way. Of course I know all about slavery from a general knowledge point of view but it came home in a slightly shocking way, thinking that cousins of the Hubbards had a servant who was probably originally a slave. The British Parliament passed the Slavery Abolition Act in 1833 and this was for the whole of the British Empire. James would have started work with the family at the age of 14, in 1764, probably never had a personal life of his own and had lost his own African names. By the time the abolition of Slavery Act was in place, people like James had become so part of the family they worked for, that going elsewhere was unthinkable. I hope he was always treated well and respected.
to be continued....
We also looked for other Phelps but apart from ..... there were only two other entries who were not close members of the immediate family - so the Phelps did return to England probably in the 1860's or 70's
to be continued
