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Dorothea Christina Thomas

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250:. Although John had already been married and widowed twice, the couple exchanged rings at a private ceremony in March. Dutch law, in spite of Britain having taken over the colonial administration, was still valid in Demerara and the ceremony was all that was legally required for a valid marriage. Thomas took the surname Gordon and the couple presented themselves as husband and wife in public, though John was reluctant to let his fellow soldiers know he was married. Gordon purchased furnishings for their home with an allowance provided by her mother and she managed his household and correspondence, including his regimental reports. 265:. John had promised Gordon that he would retire from the military and sell his commission, though he was forced to accept the standard price of £3,200, as his commanding officer held him in low regard. This was an inadequate amount to support his family, which included two children from his previous marriages. The couple returned to Glasgow, where they were joined in the autumn of 1823 by Gordon's mother, after she had enrolled Ann Garraway in school. John tried to persuade his mother-in-law to grant him a dowry of £10,000. She refused, offering £5,000, as she had to the previous suitor, which angered John. 197:. At the school, Thomas was trained in art and music, as well as bookkeeping, sewing and writing. She studied there for three years before returning to the Caribbean, where she joined her older sister, Ann and her husband John Gloster Garraway in Grenada. While living with them, she met John's brother Robert Garraway, a lawyer and business partner of his brother. Considered to be disreputable, he had already sired at least four illegitimate children with two different partners. Against her mother's warning, Thomas entered into a marriage contract with the younger Garraway in 1813. 292:, taking several years. Correspondence between the couple was presented in evidence and clearly showed the affection of John for Gordon and their son, as well as his disdain for his mother-in-law and her disregard for having her daughter respectfully wed. Though Gordon was supported in her claims that they had been widely seen as husband and wife by landlords, servants and shopkeepers, John's friends and family swore that they believed he was a single man. The final ruling, which became an important precedent in 303:, which required her to leave her son in John's care and return to Demerara. She subsequently returned to the Caribbean and married a merchant in Demerara. When her mother died in 1846, Gordon's share of the inheritance was paid directly to her children, Ann and Huntly, as there would have been little left had the monies advanced during her lifetime been deducted from the inheritance. The following year, Huntly used his inheritance to marry Julia Grantham in February 1847. He later became 296:, was issued in John's favour on 8 July 1829, and was based on his friends' and families' evidence. The chief justice wrote that marriage could not be established unless the reputation of the "friends, relations, and families of the parties" was considered. Having no friends or family members residing in Scotland, save one of John's brothers, Thomas Gordon, who refused to testify, Gordon's witnesses were deemed insufficient. 230:
placed on offspring and their ability to inherit. Illegitimacy limited the amount one could receive as a bequest, but so did the slave or free status for people of colour, as slaves were legally barred from any inheritance. The attitude toward illegitimacy was more lax outside of England, and the promise of marriage was typically sufficient to allow couples to consummate their relationships before a wedding took place.
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to support Huntly, if she left her husband. Although she preferred they leave Scotland, she agreed to pay regardless of whether they returned with her to Demerara. Fearful that he would lose his income and that she might leave with their son, John promised to formalize their marriage without a dowry as soon as his eldest son reached his majority. Reconciled, the couple moved to
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income, John wrote, "Do for godsake forgive and forget a man who loves you and ever shall continue to do so while in life". He offered to educate their son and provide her with passage back to Demerara. He prepared a document for her signature which confirmed that they had never been legally wed and acknowledged that their son was illegitimate. Gordon, unfamiliar with
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The relationship was unsuccessful and Thomas left Garraway, moving back to Barbados, where their daughter Ann Garraway was baptised on 12 January 1816. Having left Garraway, Thomas reconciled with her mother and returned to Demerara. Thomas' mother assumed the role of caring for her granddaughter and
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Gordon was caught between her husband and her mother in the argument. John urged her to press her mother for the money. She complied but was unsuccessful. He threatened to leave her and reminded her that their marriage had not conformed to English law. Her mother agreed to pay an allowance to Gordon
281:, sought the advice of a lawyer and was informed that if she could establish that they were married by "habit and repute" she could contest the settlement being offered. She filed an application to have her marriage and son's legitimacy verified, forcing John to file an application for his freedom. 205:
Drawn up by Garraway and secured by a bond of £2,000, the contract specified that he would marry Thomas "according to the rites of the Church of England" provided that he did not return to Britain before Thomas turned 21. The curious language, acknowledged that when she reached her majority, Thomas
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An analysis of Gordon's marriages offers insight into the variations of marital arrangements and family law in the British colonies. It shows that rather than women of colour being mistresses to white men, there was a range of different types of relationships resembling marriage. Archival evidence
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and only on a few islands like Barbados, Montserrat, and St. Kitts, were clandestine marriages forbidden. French and English laws pertaining to people of colour in their colonies were similar, and British law in the colonies carried no punishment for marrying irregularly. Instead restrictions were
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In 1826, John wrote to Gordon, who was at the seaside with their son, informing her that he had met a widow who had an annual income of £300. He advised that he intended to marry the widow, emphasising that he and Gordon had never been properly married. Stressing that he was marrying only for the
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with Major John Gordon became the centre of a Scottish legal case. It set an important precedent defining the circumstances under which a marriage could be established by "habit and repute" in Scotland and is illustrative of the challenges encountered in family law prior to the establishment of
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Gordon's mother took extraordinary precautions to ensure that each of her daughters remained independent and that their assets could not be used by their spouses. In her will she specified that her daughters' inheritances depended on the condition that the funds received were solely for her
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of £5,000 should he marry Thomas. A few months later, in August 1817, Garraway returned to England to address serious financial difficulties with his creditors. By 1819, it was clear that the new suitor was not working out for Thomas and she returned to Georgetown.
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uniform reciprocity agreements regarding marriage recognition. Her relationships also refute the notion that free women of colour were merely mistresses and confirm that there were various types of relationships in her era that mirrored stable marriages.
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and Joseph Thomas. Her mother was a former slave, who had purchased her own manumission, and was engaged in business, running a hotel. Her father was engaged in trade, providing goods between various islands in the
273:, where they lived as man and wife. They dined often with friends and John's family, though they did not go out in public together. As before, Gordon hired their servant and provided for their financial support. 234:
in March 1817, set out to make arrangements for a new suitor for Christina. Though their destination was undisclosed, later documents confirm that the trip involved negotiations with a freedman in
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had collapsed and to keep Demerara from falling under French influence, the British began occupying the colony in 1802, though a formal change of governance did not occur until 1814–1815.
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would be free to marry, as it was very unlikely that her mother would grant permission for the union while Thomas was a minor. Though her mother and each of her sisters were joined in
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In 1821, John was elevated to major and in the spring of that year was recalled to Scotland. Selling the furnishings to pay for Gordon's passage, she soon joined him in
210:, which allowed them the freedom to continue conducting business separately from their spouses and control their own monies, Thomas wanted a legally binding marriage. 1089:"'British Capital, Industry and Perseverance' versus Dutch 'Old School'?: The Dutch Atlantic and the Takeover of Berbice, Demerara and Essequibo, 1750–1815" 154:. She was the youngest of her mother's eleven children. Thomas, who variously was called "Christina" or "Dolly", moved with her mother around 1799 to 320:
and instead points to their ability to establish "long-lasting, stable, and apparently monogamous relationships that looked like proper marriages".
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In 1810, Thomas, her older brother Henry and more than a dozen of their cousins, were taken to Britain for schooling. The boys were enrolled at
1071: 1272: 1252: 1237: 247: 1282: 1152: 1093: 1047: 1015: 990: 1242: 1102: 214: 163: 158:, Barbados, after her father died. Business competition in Barbados was high and by 1807, her family had relocated to 304: 278: 1257: 1247: 1162: 1163:"Barbados Parochial Registers, St Michael Parish, Church of England Series A, Vol. 7A, 1815–1825: Ann Garroway" 261:, where Huntly was baptised. When John was transferred to Ireland that summer, she and the baby joined him in 1262: 138: 97: 221:, which required a ceremony performed by an authorized clergyman, did not apply outside of England. In the 246:
By early 1819, Thomas had entered into a relationship with Captain John Gordon, a Scotsman serving in the
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daughters' use and could not be used for claims of responsibility for the debts of any of their spouses.
257:, where their son Huntly George Gordon was born on 2 August. The family relocated the following year to 190: 171: 307:
in the British Army. On 15 April 1847 in Barbados, Ann married the merchant Roger Sweeney (Sweeny).
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Children of Uncertain Fortune: Mixed-Race Migration from the West Indies to Britain, 1750-1820
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John's eldest son, also named John, was born in 1808, prior to his mother's death in 1811.
8: 1183:"Cheshire Parish Registers, St. Mary's Church, Baptisms, 1813–1836: Huntly George Gordon" 222: 207: 143: 121: 1209:. Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah. 27 August 1808. microfilm #1040159 1202: 1039: 159: 62: 1148: 1116: 1088: 1043: 1011: 986: 965: 218: 983:
War, Demobilization and Memory: The Legacy of War in the Era of Atlantic Revolutions
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Enterprising Women: Gender, Race, and Power in the Revolutionary Atlantic
317: 113: 743: 693: 155: 1144: 270: 619: 167: 66: 1001: 985:. Houndsmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 254–268. 964:. Dingwall, Scotland: Ross-Shire Printing and Publishing Company. 847: 845: 733: 731: 1169:. Black Rock, Bridgeport: Department of Archives. 12 January 1816 1141:
International Life Writing: Memory and Identity in Global Context
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Dorothea Christina Thomas was born as a free woman of colour in
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The Family of Gordon in Griamachary, in the Parish of Kildonan
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disputes the literary depiction that free coloured women were
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Free woman of colour and slave owner from Grenada (1796–1846)
1201: 1161: 749: 613: 981:. In Forrest, Alan; Hagemann, Karen; Rowe, Michael (eds.). 920: 908: 872: 857: 813: 789: 755: 676: 631: 590: 501: 484: 460: 436: 1181: 699: 666: 664: 651: 649: 554: 1203:"Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564–1950: John Gordon" 779: 777: 775: 578: 566: 896: 830: 718: 716: 714: 712: 710: 708: 661: 646: 542: 530: 472: 772: 705: 412: 1224: 299:After losing the case, Gordon was offered an 999: 976: 938: 926: 914: 890: 878: 866: 851: 824: 807: 795: 766: 737: 687: 640: 625: 601: 524: 512: 495: 466: 442: 430: 406: 394: 382: 370: 1189:. Chester, UK: Record Office. 21 June 1822 1110: 1086: 454: 1056: 1031: 1000:Candlin, Kit; Pybus, Cassandra (2015). 977:Candlin, Kit; Pybus, Cassandra (2016). 954: 902: 670: 655: 584: 572: 560: 548: 536: 1225: 1035:The Last Caribbean Frontier, 1795–1815 1134: 1094:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review 836: 783: 722: 478: 418: 108:(26 June 1796 – 5 August 1846) was a 1103:Royal Netherlands Historical Society 1273:People from the British West Indies 1253:British people of Grenadian descent 13: 1238:19th-century British businesswomen 248:2nd Queen's Royal Regiment of Foot 14: 1294: 1139:. In Arthur, Paul Longley (ed.). 1101:(4). Amsterdam, the Netherlands: 750:Scotland Births and Baptisms 1808 614:Barbados Parochial Registers 1816 89:Christina Thomas, Dorothea Gordon 225:, there were no laws forbidding 947: 339: 330: 200: 700:Cheshire Parish Registers 1822 174:with Britain (1792–1802), the 137:, Grenada, on 26 June 1796 to 1: 1283:19th-century Grenadian people 1057:Livesay, Daniel Alan (2010). 353: 128: 1066:(PhD). Ann Arbor, Michigan: 1038:. Houndsmills, Basingstoke: 358: 7: 1243:African diaspora in Grenada 1008:University of Georgia Press 10: 1299: 284:The case was heard in the 213:Even though Grenada was a 1135:Pybus, Cassandra (2013). 310: 279:marriage laws in Scotland 172:French Revolutionary Wars 106:Dorothea Christina Thomas 93: 85: 77: 51: 30: 25:Dorothea Christina Thomas 23: 1087:Oostindie, Gert (2012). 939:Candlin & Pybus 2015 927:Candlin & Pybus 2015 915:Candlin & Pybus 2015 891:Candlin & Pybus 2015 879:Candlin & Pybus 2015 867:Candlin & Pybus 2015 852:Candlin & Pybus 2015 825:Candlin & Pybus 2015 808:Candlin & Pybus 2015 796:Candlin & Pybus 2015 767:Candlin & Pybus 2015 738:Candlin & Pybus 2015 688:Candlin & Pybus 2015 641:Candlin & Pybus 2015 628:, pp. 116–117, 130. 626:Candlin & Pybus 2015 602:Candlin & Pybus 2015 525:Candlin & Pybus 2015 513:Candlin & Pybus 2015 496:Candlin & Pybus 2015 467:Candlin & Pybus 2015 443:Candlin & Pybus 2015 431:Candlin & Pybus 2015 407:Candlin & Pybus 2015 395:Candlin & Pybus 2015 383:Candlin & Pybus 2015 371:Candlin & Pybus 2016 323: 191:Kensington House Academy 1112:10.18352/bmgn-lchr.8226 1027:(subscription required) 301:out of court settlement 1258:Grenadian slave owners 1248:British Grenada people 1068:University of Michigan 1022: – via  1032:Candlin, Kit (2012). 956:Bulloch, John Malcolm 457:, pp. 37–38, 46. 294:Scottish Marriage Law 189:and the girls at the 146:with his sloops, the 45:St. George's, Grenada 1263:Free people of color 941:, pp. 138, 140. 397:, pp. 107, 109. 385:, pp. 105, 110. 373:, pp. 260, 267. 288:and appealed to the 238:, who was offered a 208:common-law marriages 110:free woman of colour 1006:. Athens, Georgia: 893:, pp. 124–125. 854:, pp. 136–137. 810:, pp. 135–136. 740:, pp. 133–134. 527:, pp. 128–129. 433:, pp. 111–112. 409:, pp. 105–108. 227:mixed-race marriage 223:British West Indies 144:British West Indies 122:common-law marriage 1278:Women slave owners 1074:on 6 February 2020 1040:Palgrave Macmillan 1154:978-1-317-96716-3 1147:. pp. 5–17. 1049:978-1-137-03081-8 1017:978-0-8203-4455-3 992:978-1-137-40649-1 563:, pp. 90–91. 219:Marriage Act 1753 103: 102: 1290: 1218: 1216: 1214: 1198: 1196: 1194: 1178: 1176: 1174: 1158: 1131: 1129: 1127: 1114: 1083: 1081: 1079: 1070:. Archived from 1065: 1053: 1028: 1021: 996: 973: 942: 936: 930: 924: 918: 912: 906: 900: 894: 888: 882: 876: 870: 864: 855: 849: 840: 839:, pp. 9–10. 834: 828: 822: 811: 805: 799: 793: 787: 781: 770: 764: 753: 747: 741: 735: 726: 720: 703: 697: 691: 685: 674: 668: 659: 653: 644: 638: 629: 623: 617: 611: 605: 599: 588: 582: 576: 570: 564: 558: 552: 546: 540: 534: 528: 522: 516: 510: 499: 493: 482: 481:, pp. 7, 9. 476: 470: 464: 458: 452: 446: 440: 434: 428: 422: 416: 410: 404: 398: 392: 386: 380: 374: 368: 347: 343: 337: 334: 290:Court of Session 86:Other names 58: 40: 38: 21: 20: 1298: 1297: 1293: 1292: 1291: 1289: 1288: 1287: 1268:Grenadian women 1223: 1222: 1221: 1212: 1210: 1192: 1190: 1172: 1170: 1155: 1125: 1123: 1077: 1075: 1063: 1050: 1026: 1018: 993: 950: 945: 937: 933: 925: 921: 913: 909: 901: 897: 889: 885: 877: 873: 865: 858: 850: 843: 835: 831: 823: 814: 806: 802: 794: 790: 782: 773: 765: 756: 748: 744: 736: 729: 721: 706: 698: 694: 686: 677: 669: 662: 654: 647: 639: 632: 624: 620: 612: 608: 600: 591: 583: 579: 571: 567: 559: 555: 547: 543: 535: 531: 523: 519: 511: 502: 494: 485: 477: 473: 465: 461: 453: 449: 441: 437: 429: 425: 417: 413: 405: 401: 393: 389: 381: 377: 369: 365: 361: 356: 351: 350: 344: 340: 335: 331: 326: 313: 305:surgeon-general 286:Sheriff's Court 203: 131: 73: 60: 56: 47: 42: 36: 34: 26: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1296: 1286: 1285: 1280: 1275: 1270: 1265: 1260: 1255: 1250: 1245: 1240: 1235: 1220: 1219: 1199: 1179: 1159: 1153: 1143:. London, UK: 1132: 1084: 1054: 1048: 1029: 1016: 997: 991: 974: 951: 949: 946: 944: 943: 931: 929:, p. 137. 919: 917:, p. 207. 907: 895: 883: 881:, p. 140. 871: 869:, p. 160. 856: 841: 829: 827:, p. 136. 812: 800: 798:, p. 135. 788: 771: 769:, p. 134. 754: 742: 727: 704: 692: 690:, p. 132. 675: 660: 645: 643:, p. 131. 630: 618: 606: 604:, p. 130. 589: 587:, p. 140. 577: 575:, p. 206. 565: 553: 541: 529: 517: 515:, p. 127. 500: 498:, p. 126. 483: 471: 469:, p. 123. 459: 455:Oostindie 2012 447: 445:, p. 113. 435: 423: 411: 399: 387: 375: 362: 360: 357: 355: 352: 349: 348: 338: 328: 327: 325: 322: 312: 309: 215:British Colony 202: 199: 183:Dollar Academy 139:Dorothy Kirwan 130: 127: 101: 100: 98:Dorothy Thomas 95: 91: 90: 87: 83: 82: 79: 75: 74: 71:British Guiana 61: 59:(aged 50) 53: 49: 48: 43: 32: 28: 27: 24: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1295: 1284: 1281: 1279: 1276: 1274: 1271: 1269: 1266: 1264: 1261: 1259: 1256: 1254: 1251: 1249: 1246: 1244: 1241: 1239: 1236: 1234: 1231: 1230: 1228: 1208: 1204: 1200: 1188: 1184: 1180: 1168: 1164: 1160: 1156: 1150: 1146: 1142: 1138: 1133: 1122: 1118: 1113: 1108: 1104: 1100: 1096: 1095: 1090: 1085: 1073: 1069: 1062: 1061: 1055: 1051: 1045: 1041: 1037: 1036: 1030: 1025: 1019: 1013: 1009: 1005: 1004: 998: 994: 988: 984: 980: 975: 971: 967: 963: 962: 957: 953: 952: 940: 935: 928: 923: 916: 911: 905:, p. 47. 904: 899: 892: 887: 880: 875: 868: 863: 861: 853: 848: 846: 838: 833: 826: 821: 819: 817: 809: 804: 797: 792: 786:, p. 10. 785: 780: 778: 776: 768: 763: 761: 759: 751: 746: 739: 734: 732: 724: 719: 717: 715: 713: 711: 709: 702:, p. 40. 701: 696: 689: 684: 682: 680: 673:, p. 16. 672: 667: 665: 658:, p. 15. 657: 652: 650: 642: 637: 635: 627: 622: 616:, p. 26. 615: 610: 603: 598: 596: 594: 586: 581: 574: 569: 562: 557: 551:, p. 85. 550: 545: 539:, p. 21. 538: 533: 526: 521: 514: 509: 507: 505: 497: 492: 490: 488: 480: 475: 468: 463: 456: 451: 444: 439: 432: 427: 420: 415: 408: 403: 396: 391: 384: 379: 372: 367: 363: 342: 333: 329: 321: 319: 308: 306: 302: 297: 295: 291: 287: 282: 280: 274: 272: 266: 264: 260: 256: 251: 249: 244: 241: 237: 231: 228: 224: 220: 216: 211: 209: 198: 196: 192: 188: 184: 179: 177: 173: 170:. During the 169: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 140: 136: 126: 123: 119: 115: 111: 107: 99: 96: 92: 88: 84: 80: 76: 72: 68: 64: 55:5 August 1846 54: 50: 46: 33: 29: 22: 19: 1211:. Retrieved 1207:FamilySearch 1206: 1191:. Retrieved 1187:FamilySearch 1186: 1171:. Retrieved 1167:FamilySearch 1166: 1140: 1124:. Retrieved 1098: 1092: 1076:. Retrieved 1072:the original 1059: 1034: 1024:Project MUSE 1002: 982: 960: 948:Bibliography 934: 922: 910: 903:Candlin 2012 898: 886: 874: 832: 803: 791: 745: 725:, p. 9. 695: 671:Bulloch 1907 656:Bulloch 1907 621: 609: 585:Livesay 2010 580: 573:Livesay 2010 568: 561:Livesay 2010 556: 549:Livesay 2010 544: 537:Livesay 2010 532: 520: 474: 462: 450: 438: 426: 421:, p. 8. 414: 402: 390: 378: 366: 341: 332: 314: 298: 283: 275: 267: 252: 245: 232: 212: 204: 201:Married life 180: 176:Dutch Empire 164:Dutch Colony 151: 147: 135:St. George's 132: 105: 104: 57:(1846-08-05) 41:26 June 1796 18: 1233:1796 births 114:slave owner 78:Nationality 1227:Categories 1213:7 February 1193:6 February 1173:6 February 1126:3 February 1078:6 February 837:Pybus 2013 784:Pybus 2013 723:Pybus 2013 479:Pybus 2013 419:Pybus 2013 354:References 318:concubines 160:Georgetown 156:Bridgetown 129:Early life 63:Georgetown 37:1796-06-26 1145:Routledge 1121:0165-0505 1105:: 28–55. 359:Citations 271:Edinburgh 162:, in the 970:52059651 958:(1907). 168:Demerara 150:and the 120:, whose 67:Demerara 259:Chester 255:Glasgow 187:Glasgow 118:Grenada 81:British 1151:  1119:  1046:  1014:  989:  968:  311:Legacy 263:Dublin 236:Tobago 217:, the 195:London 94:Mother 1064:(PDF) 324:Notes 240:dowry 185:near 116:from 1215:2020 1195:2020 1175:2020 1149:ISBN 1128:2020 1117:ISSN 1080:2020 1044:ISBN 1012:ISBN 987:ISBN 966:OCLC 152:Jack 148:Mary 112:and 52:Died 31:Born 1107:doi 1099:127 193:in 166:of 1229:: 1205:. 1185:. 1165:. 1115:. 1097:. 1091:. 1042:. 1010:. 859:^ 844:^ 815:^ 774:^ 757:^ 730:^ 707:^ 678:^ 663:^ 648:^ 633:^ 592:^ 503:^ 486:^ 69:, 65:, 1217:. 1197:. 1177:. 1157:. 1130:. 1109:: 1082:. 1052:. 1020:. 995:. 972:. 752:. 39:) 35:(

Index

St. George's, Grenada
Georgetown
Demerara
British Guiana
Dorothy Thomas
free woman of colour
slave owner
Grenada
common-law marriage
St. George's
Dorothy Kirwan
British West Indies
Bridgetown
Georgetown
Dutch Colony
Demerara
French Revolutionary Wars
Dutch Empire
Dollar Academy
Glasgow
Kensington House Academy
London
common-law marriages
British Colony
Marriage Act 1753
British West Indies
mixed-race marriage
Tobago
dowry
2nd Queen's Royal Regiment of Foot

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