Barbados Sugar’s Unseen History


Fatal Molten Memories: The Iron Kettles of Sugar's Past

In 18th-century Barbados, cane sugar production counted on cast-iron syrup kettles, an approach later on embraced in the American South. Sugarcane was crushed using wind and animal-powered mills. The extracted juice was boiled, clarified, and vaporized in a series of kettles of decreasing size to produce crystallized sugar.

The Sweet Economy: Barbados Sugar Economy. Barbados, frequently called the "Gem of the Caribbean," owes much of its historic prominence to one product: sugar. This golden crop changed the island from a small colonial station into a powerhouse of the worldwide economy during the 17th and 18th centuries. Yet, the sweet success of sugar was built on a foundation of oppressed labour, a fact that casts a shadow over its legacy.





Boiling Sugar: A Lealthal Task

Sugar production in the days of colonial slavery was  an unforgiving process. After gathering and squashing the sugarcane, its juice was boiled in massive cast iron kettles till it took shape as sugar. These pots, often set up in a series called a"" train"" were heated up by blazing fires that workers had to stir constantly. The heat was extreme, the flames unforgiving and the work unrelenting. Enslaved workers sustained long hours, typically standing near to the inferno, running the risk of burns and exhaustion. Splashes of the boiling liquid were not uncommon and could cause extreme, even fatal, injuries.







By acknowledging the harmful labour of enslaved Africans, we honour their contributions and sacrifices. Barbados" sugar market, built on their backs, formed the island's history and economy. As we admire the antiques of this age, we should also keep in mind the people whose work and resilience made it possible. Their story is a vital part of understanding not simply the history of Barbados however the wider history of the Caribbean and the worldwide effect of the sugar trade.



 
The video illustrates chapter 20 of Rogues in Paradise. The scene is of Hunts Gardens carved out of the many gullies in Barbados: Meet the remarkable man who produced the most captivated place on earth!

HISTORICAL RECORDS!


 Abolitionist Expose Sugar Plantation Horrors
 
Abolitionist works, including James Ramsay's works, expose the extreme threats oppressed employees faced in Caribbean sugar plantations. The boiling house, with its enormous open vats of scalding sugar, wound up being a place of impossible suffering and fatal accidents.


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Boiling Down Sweetness


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