Charity and terror in eighteenth-century Jamaica: The Kingston Hospital and Asylum for Deserted ?Negroes?
Charity and terror in eighteenth-century Jamaica: The Kingston Hospital and Asylum for Deserted ?Negroes?
The Hospital and Asylum for Deserted Negroes in Kingston, Jamaica, was a major site of care for indigent blacks in one of the most densely populated urban centers on one of Britain's most valuable sugar islands. When the hospital opened, sometime after 1788, blacks outnumbered whites ten to one in Jamaica, and the island's whites continued to enact oppressive measures to control the colony's restive black population. This article shows how the Hospital and Asylum for Deserted Negroes became a strategic component in this scheme, joining an expansive network of workhouses and gaols the colonial government used to instill racialized law and order. From its early inception, one of the hospital's unspoken goals was to prevent lawlessness in a space marred by slave resistance. Finally, this article demonstrates how the early development of Jamaica's public health medical infrastructure was, in a large part, nurtured by the slave system.
CITATION: Hogarth, Rana. Charity and terror in eighteenth-century Jamaica: The Kingston Hospital and Asylum for Deserted ?Negroes? . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2017. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 10, Number 3, 2017, PP. 281-298 - Available at: https://library.au.int/charity-and-terror-eighteenth-century-jamaica-kingston-hospital-and-asylum-deserted-negroes