Slavery and the British country house

Bibliographic Information

Slavery and the British country house

edited by Madge Dresser and Andrew Hann

English Heritage, 2013

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

There are few things more emblematic of England's heritage than the great country houses which grace our landscape. But such properties are not to be viewed simply as objects of architectural and curatorial or artistic interest. They are also expressions of wealth, power and privilege and, as new questions are being asked of England's historic role in the Atlantic world, and in particular about slavery, new connections are being unearthed between the nation's great houses and its colonial past. In 2007 English Heritage commissioned initial research into links with transatlantic slavery or its abolition amongst families who owned properties now in its care. This was part of the commitment by English Heritage to commemorate the bicentenary of the abolition of the British transatlantic slave trade with work that would make a real difference to our understanding of the historic environment in the longer term. The research findings and those of other scholars and heritage practitioners were presented at the 'Slavery and the British Country House' conference which brought together academics, heritage professionals, country house owners and community researchers from across Britain to explore how country houses might be reconsidered in the light of their slavery linkages and how such links have been and might be presented to visitors. Since then the conference papers have been updated and reworked into a cutting edge volume which represents the most current and comprehensive consideration of slavery and the British country house as yet undertaken. English Heritage is proud to be publishing work on which historians, educators and heritage professionals can all build to develop new understandings of this challenging and important part of our national story.

Table of Contents

1: Slave ownership and the British country house: the records of the Slave Compensation Commission as evidence Nicholas Draper 2: Slavery and West Country houses Madge Dresser 3: Rural retreats: Liverpool slave traders and their country houses Jane Longmore 4: Lodges, garden houses and villas: the urban periphery in the early modern Atlantic world Roger H Leech 5: Slavery's heritage footprint: British prestige residencies with links to plantations in St Vincent, 1814-34 Simon D Smith 6: An open elite? Colonial commerce, the country house and the case of Sir Gilbert Heathcote and Normanton Hall Nuala Zahedieh 7: Property, power and authority: the implicit and explicit slavery connections of Bolsover Castle and Brodsworth Hall in the 18th century Sheryllynne Haggerty and Susanne Seymour 8: Atlantic slavery and classical culture at Marble Hill and Northington Grange Laurence Brown 9: Slavery and the sublime: the Atlantic trade, landscape aesthetics and tourism Victoria Perry 10: West Indian echoes: Dodington House, the Codrington family and Caribbean heritage Natalie Zacek 11: Contesting the political legacy of slavery in England's country houses: a case study of Kenwood and Osborne Houses Caroline Bressey 12: Representing the East and West India links to the British country house: the London borough of Bexley and the wider heritage picture Cliff Pereira 13: Reinterpretation: the representation of perspectives on slave trade history using creative media Rob Mitchell and Shawn Sobers

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top