>> Dr. Elaine: Abolitionists knew that homing in on the treatment of
Speaker:enslaved women would provoke a lot of
Speaker:outrage. Even though the British public did
Speaker:not see black women as sort of proper
Speaker:women, they did think that assaulting
Speaker:women of any race was
Speaker:barbaric. So all of this is to say
Speaker:enslaved women featured heavily in
Speaker:abolitionist material.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Welcome to Whispers of the Past. I'm your
Speaker:host, Filo Vit. In this, part
Speaker:two of Golden Rock Dreams and Nightmares, we
Speaker:unravel the striking contradictions of synthastacia
Speaker:during its golden rock era between
Speaker:1750 and 1800. This
Speaker:was a time of immense prosperity, and
Speaker:the island thrived as a global trading hub,
Speaker:connecting continents and fueling revolutions.
Speaker:Yet beneath the prosperity lay a complex
Speaker:reality, one of exploitation,
Speaker:enslavement, and society sustained by human
Speaker:suffering. These
Speaker:contradictions force us to ask critical
Speaker:how do we reconcile the celebrated wealth of a place
Speaker:with the suffering that underpinned it?
Speaker:Whose voices have been lost? And why does this
Speaker:matter? As we examine the legacy of
Speaker:colonization, the
Speaker:history of Sintostatius has often been told through the
Speaker:colonial lens, centering on the actions
Speaker:of European men. Missing from this dominant
Speaker:narrative are the enslaved, whose labor sustained the
Speaker:island's wealth, and women, whose roles were shaped
Speaker:by both resilience and compliancy.
Speaker:In this episode, we seek to uncover the silence
Speaker:in history and bring to light the voices that are
Speaker:often overlooked. Amongst these
Speaker:overlooked stories are those of women who navigate a system
Speaker:of power and patriarchy. There
Speaker:is some archival material from this time period about some of the
Speaker:elite women of women like
Speaker:Judith Godet, Maxwell De Grave, and Sarah
Speaker:Godad Benner Don Lovick. They influence
Speaker:the consolidation of wealth and power through strategic
Speaker:marriages, inheritance, and property management.
Speaker:Yet their privileges were built on a system of
Speaker:exploitation that depended on the labor of the
Speaker:enslaved. This
Speaker:duality of resilience and complicity
Speaker:challenges us to approach history with
Speaker:nuance. How can we honor the strength of these
Speaker:women while confronting the systems they
Speaker:upheld? As we explore the legacies
Speaker:of Sintostatius, we continue to amplify the
Speaker:stories that were left in the shadows and reflect on
Speaker:the shared but unequal experience of those who
Speaker:lived through these transformative eras.
Speaker:To begin, we revisit a pivotal moment in the
Speaker:island's history with Mr. Richardson, the island's
Speaker:heritage. Inspector.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: Slavery is still not abolished. Um,
Speaker:and you would see a lot of strange things later on that would
Speaker:happen, especially in the early 1800s. But
Speaker:before that, after the islands, um, you
Speaker:know, salutes the American flag, recognizes
Speaker:USA as, uh, an independent country. It
Speaker:still goes kind of Pretty well, everyone is still welcome
Speaker:on Sius. You know, you have the Jewish
Speaker:community, you have the Anglican community, the Dutch
Speaker:reform, you know, you have
Speaker:Anabaptists, you have everyone, you have
Speaker:Catholics that were worshiping in private residences. So you have
Speaker:everyone is basically welcome. On
Speaker:stage.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Within the thriving community of Sint Eustatius were
Speaker:women who quietly influenced its prosperity and
Speaker:social fabric. Judith
Speaker:Gaudette Maxwell de Grave was born into a
Speaker:wealthy planter family, solidifying her
Speaker:influence through her marriage to commander Johannes de
Speaker:Geff. Together, their combined
Speaker:wealth and social standing positioned Judith as a
Speaker:key figure during this era, overseeing fast
Speaker:plantations and properties.
Speaker:Her story challenges the notion that only men
Speaker:drove synthesia's economic success,
Speaker:revealing how marriages,
Speaker:inheritance and strategic alliances
Speaker:allowed women to navigate the constraint of colonial
Speaker:patriarchy.
Speaker:Similarly, elite, uh, women like Sarah Godett, Benner
Speaker:Dunlopig played crucial roles in
Speaker:consolidating wealth and power.
Speaker:Born into prominence, Sarah's
Speaker:influence extended far beyond her household.
Speaker:Through three strategic marriages to Henry
Speaker:Benner, William Donne, and Thomas Lofic,
Speaker:she united some of the island's most lucrative
Speaker:plantations under her control.
Speaker:Her alliances with influential families like
Speaker:Benners and Dunns ensured her
Speaker:descendant inherited a vast network of wealth and
Speaker:property. This
Speaker:consolidation of land highlights the critical but
Speaker:often overlooked contributions of women in shaping
Speaker:the island's economic foundations.
Speaker:Judith's and Sarah's stories, along with others,
Speaker:demonstrate how women operated within the colonial
Speaker:system to secure influence. Their
Speaker:legacy revealed a complex dynamic of power,
Speaker:gender and wealth in a time to dominated
Speaker:by men. Amongst
Speaker:these figures was Johannes the Grave, governor of
Speaker:Syntostatius during its most transformative
Speaker:years. Born into an
Speaker:influential island family, the KAF's rise to
Speaker:power paralleled the island's emergence as a
Speaker:global trading hub. He had
Speaker:immense wealth, uh, owning 10 plantations.
Speaker:He was a holder of 300 enslaved people
Speaker:and had 16 trading ships.
Speaker:Yet the graft is perhaps best remembered for his
Speaker:bold recognition of the American
Speaker:independence. In
Speaker:1776, he slew the American
Speaker:warship the Andrew Doria, making
Speaker:Sintostatius the first foreign power to
Speaker:acknowledge the United States of America.
Speaker:While we were being celebrated by the Americans,
Speaker:this act infuriated the British,
Speaker:placing synthesias at the center of a global
Speaker:conflict.
Speaker:These stories of wealth, revolution and
Speaker:exploitations are deeply intertwined.
Speaker:Elite women like Judith and Sara used their positions to
Speaker:shape family legacies, but their privileges were
Speaker:underpinned by a system of enslavement and
Speaker:inequalities. As we examine these
Speaker:women's agency, we must also confront the systems
Speaker:they uphold, reflecting how power,
Speaker:privilege and Exploitation shape the fabric of
Speaker:Sintostatius and the world beyond.
Speaker:While the wealth of Sintostatius was shaped in part by
Speaker:the influential individuals, the island's
Speaker:prosperity extended far beyond families like the Gaudet and
Speaker:the graves. Its thriving economy
Speaker:drew people from diverse backgrounds, creating a
Speaker:community where culture and opportunities
Speaker:intersected. This prosperity
Speaker:wasn't limited to the elite. Free people
Speaker:of color. And wealthy merchants
Speaker:also carved out spaces of influence
Speaker:within this independent island nation.
Speaker:Yet as we delve deeper, we see that this era
Speaker:of wealth and opportunity came with stark inequalities
Speaker:both visible and hidden in the shadows of
Speaker:history. With this in mind, we return to Mr.
Speaker:Richardson.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: It's a free for all as long as you pay it.
Speaker:You even have free people of color that were
Speaker:living on the island and everything is going bliss
Speaker:and you're kind of like this wealthy independent nation. And
Speaker:of course, synthesis was also known for even
Speaker:wealthy merchants at that time printing their own
Speaker:coins with their own names on it. You know, think
Speaker:of a gosling, et cetera. So the island is just extremely
Speaker:wealthy.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): This wealth wasn't coincidental.
Speaker:Syntostacia's open roadstead made it one
Speaker:of the busiest ports in the world. By the
Speaker:1780s, we were attracting ships from Europe,
Speaker:Africa, the Americans and beyond.
Speaker:But this prosperity came at a profound human
Speaker:cost. To understand the scale of the
Speaker:economic engine, we turned to archaeologists,
Speaker:Dr. Stelton, who shares with us the island
Speaker:maritime history.
Speaker:>> Dr. Stelton: So in the 1770s and the 1780s, there
Speaker:were between three and three and a half thousand ships that dropped
Speaker:anchor and Stacia each year. And
Speaker:those are the only the ones that are recorded. Right. So there were probably
Speaker:interlopers and people who were trading illegally
Speaker:as well, probably in the remote base to the north, like
Speaker:Tamilandig Bay and Jenkins Bay, but the recorded ones, between
Speaker:three and three and a half thousand every year. So that's,
Speaker:yeah, that's a significant number of ships. And they were coming
Speaker:from all over the world. They were coming from Europe,
Speaker:from North America, from throughout the Caribbean, from West
Speaker:Africa, South America. And all of
Speaker:that was possible because
Speaker:Staesia has such a large open roadstead where all these ships can
Speaker:anchor. So that is by far, I think, the most
Speaker:important and defining feature if you look at the maritime
Speaker:history of the island and especially in the 18th century.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): November 16, 1776,
Speaker:marked a pivotal moment in Syntostatia's history.
Speaker:On this day, the island saluted the Andrea Doria,
Speaker:an American warship that, ah, played a key role in the
Speaker:naval efforts during the American Revolution.
Speaker:The Andrew Doria's arrival in Sint Eustacea's
Speaker:harbor was symbolic as it was part of a broader
Speaker:movement of American vessels seeking
Speaker:international recognition and support from their struggles
Speaker:against Britain. For some, this salute was a
Speaker:bold gesture of freedom and revolution. But
Speaker:for other colonial powers, it was seen as a direct
Speaker:challenge to their authority.
Speaker:Governor Johannes Zhaerf's decision to recognize the
Speaker:United States wasn't a mistake. At
Speaker:the time, Synthesias almost acted like an
Speaker:independent nation with the slow communication between
Speaker:the Hague and Oranjestad, leaving the island to
Speaker:make its own decisions. However, this
Speaker:recognition came at a heavy cost. It transforms
Speaker:Interstacia from a neutral trade haven into a target
Speaker:for British revenge, dragging the island into a
Speaker:global conflict. Mr.
Speaker:Richardson will now walk us through this pivotal historical
Speaker:moment.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: And of course the American independence is being
Speaker:heavily supported by Saint Eustatius.
Speaker:Saint M. Eustatius at that time kind of acts like an
Speaker:independent nation because correspondence between the Hague and
Speaker:Oranjesat would have taken months. What
Speaker:you see is interesting is that, you know, November 16th
Speaker:comes around and we have a governor called
Speaker:Johannes de Graaf who salutes the Andrew
Speaker:Doria. Actually the Brig of War sails in and
Speaker:fires shots and um,
Speaker:Johannes de Graaf, who's the governor at the time,
Speaker:replies to these shots, also kind of
Speaker:solidifying that first salute as they call
Speaker:it, and recognizing America as an
Speaker:independent nation. But what's interesting is any people thought and
Speaker:think it was a mistake. It was not a
Speaker:mistake because you know, Johannes de Graaf, who's the governor
Speaker:at the time, he was born into this role. The
Speaker:governorship of these islands were kind of a dynasty. They
Speaker:were royalty outside of royalty in Europe.
Speaker:Johannes de Grafs, his father was governor at the time,
Speaker:so he should have known this. And his father was governor
Speaker:at the time when America was already fighting the war of
Speaker:Independence against the British. So Yohannes as a
Speaker:young boy, he should have known this. And Johannes
Speaker:grandfather was governor of Stusatius. And
Speaker:if you go further, his great grandfather was
Speaker:governor of St. That's already like five generations
Speaker:down the line of governorship. How could you not
Speaker:know the rules of engagement? So these things were no mistake.
Speaker:They fully well knew what they were doing.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): While, uh, the American Revolution reshaped global power
Speaker:dynamics, Sintostasia faced a different kind of
Speaker:upheaval. In October of
Speaker:1780, one of the deadliest hurricane
Speaker:in recorded history struck the Caribbean. The
Speaker:hurricane left a trail of devastation
Speaker:profoundly impacting Sintostatius. Homes
Speaker:were destroyed, lives were lost and
Speaker:livelihoods were Disrupted.
Speaker:This catastrophe marked a crucial turning point for the
Speaker:island. As it began to rebuild, synthesis became
Speaker:increasingly vulnerable, both economically and
Speaker:politically. Misasutukao, a long term
Speaker:island resident and one of the founders of the island center
Speaker:of Archaeology and Research,
Speaker:recounts the history of this period of growth
Speaker:and struggle that shaped the island's
Speaker:future.
Speaker:>> Ms. Sutekau: And our agreement here on Station was
Speaker:to trade with the American colonies,
Speaker:um, and provide them their arms, their
Speaker:ammunition, their other things that they needed during the war.
Speaker:But this was the biggest period of
Speaker:Seius growth.
Speaker:Then with the hurricane of 1780
Speaker:which had greatly affected the population during
Speaker:the 20 over 78, a uh,
Speaker:lot of people died during that hurricane and
Speaker:a lot of houses were destroyed and Station had to
Speaker:rebuild. Unfortunately, February of
Speaker:1781, English Boundary had
Speaker:enough of our trade with uh, the
Speaker:colonies and the Rodney captured the island.
Speaker:Then this was a period where Eustacea went
Speaker:downhill and we were, the
Speaker:warehouses were closed and we were in bad
Speaker:shape from 17 uh to
Speaker:1784.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): In December of 1781, Syntostatius
Speaker:became the focus of British frustration.
Speaker:Officially declaring war on the island, King George
Speaker:III and his government targeted its vital
Speaker:trade network, accusing
Speaker:Sintostatius of aiding in the American
Speaker:Revolution. This marked the beginning of one of the most
Speaker:turbulent periods in the island's history.
Speaker:The British invasion wasn't just a military
Speaker:act. It was a calculated effort to dismantle
Speaker:the economic engine that had been supporting their
Speaker:rivals. Mr. Richardson
Speaker:continues.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: So you see that's already going to go downhill from
Speaker:here economically, but also
Speaker:socially this is going to lead to
Speaker:1781, where the British actually are now
Speaker:coming in. And in an official decree
Speaker:actually that I saw, uh, original of
Speaker:26 December
Speaker:1781, the British
Speaker:declares war.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): The British invasion led by Admiral
Speaker:Rodney was marked by paranoia and
Speaker:cruelty. Rodney's suspicion of the island's
Speaker:inhabitants, merchants, Jewish families and
Speaker:free people of color, spiraled into harsh
Speaker:and devastating measures.
Speaker:Entire communities were uprooted, assets
Speaker:were seized, and the once thriving social
Speaker:fabric began to unravel fast.
Speaker:Rodney's occupation wasn't just a military
Speaker:campaign. It was a direct assault on the
Speaker:diverse interconnected communities that made
Speaker:Synthesius so unique.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: King George iii, who is supposedly
Speaker:mad at this time, uh, he
Speaker:declares war on St. Eustatius.
Speaker:And to this day it is said to be one
Speaker:of the longest deliberations ever of the House of
Speaker:Parliament in Westminster. And you see that
Speaker:it's a long declaration of war. It's more
Speaker:than 10 pages where they go into the extent
Speaker:of what is to be done. To St.
Speaker:Eustatius. And then there's this
Speaker:admiral, this Lord Burke is his name.
Speaker:And he closes off this session just before, like the
Speaker:gavel goes down. So you can kind of reimagine
Speaker:it as being in the House of Commons in the
Speaker:uk and, you know, all of these crossbenches are
Speaker:screaming at each other. And then here is this Edmund Burke is
Speaker:like, you know, and before we end, I just want you to say
Speaker:this, like, sink the island, sink it, sink.
Speaker:You know, I want to see Syntustatius at,
Speaker:ah, the bottom of the sea where it belongs.
Speaker:It has no defenses and its only
Speaker:glory has been its location and its
Speaker:trade. And you really get the
Speaker:essence of Lord Burke's anger
Speaker:at Centius for helping them aid the
Speaker:usa. And one can only think the
Speaker:tantrums they must have had knowing that 2
Speaker:Statius was like a bad word for the British.
Speaker:So then the fourth Dutch Anglo war
Speaker:that comes between the English and the
Speaker:Dutch was actually declared on
Speaker:St Eustatius and dependencies.
Speaker:Many people don't know this, but when
Speaker:the British were sailing down and the British were
Speaker:gathering from other islands, they actually distracted
Speaker:St. Martin. I, um, St. Martin was also
Speaker:part of this destruction.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): The British attack on Sint Eustaceous was
Speaker:carefully planned before focusing on the island itself.
Speaker:They first targeted neighboring islands like St.
Speaker:Martin, knowing it would be difficult for anyone to help if
Speaker:the island fell. With
Speaker:St. Martin captured, they then turned their attention to
Speaker:Sint Eustace. The result was a devastating blow to
Speaker:the island's trade economy. But the British occupation
Speaker:didn't end there.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: They knew there was nothing much on Ceiba. It was high, it was
Speaker:isolated, it was much smaller. But they actually
Speaker:sailed into St. Martin first and knew if
Speaker:they burned Fort Amsterdam and
Speaker:they kind of captured St. Martin, there
Speaker:was no one else to help because that was the last Dutch
Speaker:island in that corner. So
Speaker:they did that. So it was carefully planned. And then Rodney
Speaker:came in and then what they call the
Speaker:plundering, not technically, because the trade,
Speaker:Rodney kind of allows the trade to continue
Speaker:during his period because he's kind of fooling everyone off,
Speaker:you know, and then Rodney stays on the island.
Speaker:And what's interesting is many of the things that
Speaker:Rodney would have account for in his
Speaker:journals, in his diary while being on the
Speaker:island, eventually. Fast forward now in parts
Speaker:of Stacia's collective memory
Speaker:in a lot of plays and the way a lot of people behave
Speaker:and even in the funerary customs of how
Speaker:people still bury people, it all comes
Speaker:from the British occupation of the Island.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Rodney's occupation left a profound impact on the
Speaker:island. The trauma of his actions
Speaker:influenced not only the immediate residents, but also
Speaker:the cultural fabric of synthesis,
Speaker:particularly in customs like burial practices.
Speaker:His paranoia and control tactics shaped
Speaker:social behaviors that endured for generations.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: So you see that it's so traumatic that it's
Speaker:still part of society today. The way people bury
Speaker:people, for example. I've read one of his documentation
Speaker:of it. So one morning there's a funeral, and
Speaker:Rodney is now staying in the present day
Speaker:museum. And from the balcony he looks
Speaker:out the window and in the direction of the
Speaker:Jewish synagogue, he sees there's a funeral going
Speaker:on and there's everyone in black and everyone is
Speaker:crying. But also, Rodney noted that there were quite
Speaker:a lot of funerals on the island. It's like everyone was
Speaker:dying. Like it was a trend. If you weren't
Speaker:dead, you weren't part of the trend,
Speaker:and everyone was just dying. And Rodney decides, you
Speaker:know what, I'm going to get dressed. And he
Speaker:fetches, um, to get a horse and
Speaker:he mounts himself on the horse and he goes to pay
Speaker:his respects to this funeral.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Rodney's curiosity led to a chilling
Speaker:moment that mirrored the growing tension of the
Speaker:occupation. His decision to attend
Speaker:a funeral, observing it from a distance
Speaker:would mark a strange chapter in history of
Speaker:syncestatius, where paranoia and
Speaker:fear were at the heart of everyday life.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: And Rodney drilled down in
Speaker:his journal after that, when the
Speaker:casket was passing, you know, he wanted to pay his
Speaker:respects. And they weren't the caskets with the lids like we know
Speaker:them today. It was just a cover that would go on.
Speaker:And Rodney kind of,
Speaker:you know, out of curiosity
Speaker:wanted to look in, and he
Speaker:kind of, you know, looked in
Speaker:from his horse and also, you know, like realized something was
Speaker:off here. And when the person in
Speaker:the casket saw, of course, the sword edging
Speaker:towards them, he jumped out
Speaker:of the coffin and ran up the road that we call
Speaker:Fort Oran Yisrael. He ran up that road and
Speaker:Rodney recorded this in his journal. So it's insane that
Speaker:something like this actually happened. And people
Speaker:ran with fright, not because the dead was awake,
Speaker:but because they know bust they were busted.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): This incident symbolizes Rodney's growing
Speaker:distrust of the island's inhabitants.
Speaker:His paranoia spiraled, leading to a widespread
Speaker:social disruption. As
Speaker:Rodney tightened the grip, entire
Speaker:communities, Jewish families,
Speaker:merchants, and even free people of color
Speaker:face brutal measures, forever
Speaker:altering the fabric of synthesia.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: And that's when they saw that under the coffin there were a
Speaker:lot of valuable documents, papers and deeds.
Speaker:So people were Trying to bury, um, their
Speaker:valuables as well. And then Rodney goes basically
Speaker:ballistic because now it's like all of these
Speaker:funerals, were they real, were they fake? He
Speaker:becomes almost paranoid here. He becomes kind of
Speaker:this evil deviant. You know, he's like, exporting the
Speaker:Jews. The Jews are all rounded up, and I think their place
Speaker:in the building that's currently the dive shop, I think it's that
Speaker:particular building was the weighing house. And you see that the
Speaker:Jews are all put in that building, um,
Speaker:separated. The men from the women are put in another cellar. The men
Speaker:are in another building. Free people of color are free
Speaker:no more. All enslaved people that were free at
Speaker:the time or reinstated into slavery. Rodney is becoming
Speaker:extremely paranoid and he starts to
Speaker:auction off the stuff that out of the synagogue.
Speaker:And the Jews are being expelled at high rates.
Speaker:Something that would have been labeled
Speaker:anti Semitic, you know, under today's standards.
Speaker:Rodney didn't only do that to the Jews, but also to
Speaker:the Catholics, the rich merchants, the Dutch
Speaker:merchants, free people of color. So he
Speaker:attacks every part of Stacia
Speaker:society in his paranoia. It's about
Speaker:1783 now, I think. 1782,
Speaker:1783.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Rodney's actions during this period revealed a brutal
Speaker:attempt to control every aspect of the island
Speaker:society. His measures left deep
Speaker:scars, marking a turning point in the lives
Speaker:of Cintastasia's diverse communities. The
Speaker:legacy of Rodney's tactics lasted far beyond the
Speaker:18th century, disrupting cultural norms
Speaker:and leading to superstitions that influenced
Speaker:Synastasia's burial practices and collective memory
Speaker:for generations. This enduring
Speaker:impact is a testament how deeply historical
Speaker:events shape communities not only
Speaker:through their immediate consequences, but through the
Speaker:echoes they leave in cultural traditions and shared
Speaker:history.
Speaker:>> Mr. Richardson: So, of course, out of that, a lot of superstition
Speaker:developed. Many plays that were written
Speaker:by Ellis Lopes. They were all funeral plays,
Speaker:and every play, someone jumps out of a coffin.
Speaker:In Europe, it's normal to put your favorite thing in the
Speaker:casket, et cetera. But you see that people begin to
Speaker:not do that for a long time on Stacia, out of, like,
Speaker:oh, if you do it, then, you know Rodney's gonna still
Speaker:come. So you see that people stop, like, for a very
Speaker:long time, colloquially, like, out of
Speaker:superstition. People no longer wanna bury someone
Speaker:with coins or with anything of value
Speaker:because, you know, it keeps the spirit awake. They
Speaker:will not rest out of fear of Rodney coming back. And you
Speaker:see all of these weird kind of mythical
Speaker:stories then develop out of something that actually
Speaker:happened. So you see how that kind of a
Speaker:historical fact trickled down 200
Speaker:years later into superstition of station
Speaker:society. And I think that is, you know, again, really
Speaker:interesting how history kind of shapes
Speaker:society. Whether it's a big place or a small place,
Speaker:you always kind of connect it to something that
Speaker:happened.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): As Mr. Richardson illustrates, the trauma of
Speaker:Rodney's occupation left an incredible mark on the
Speaker:cultural and social fabric of Sintostatius,
Speaker:creating superstition and traditions that endured
Speaker:for centuries. But even as these legacies
Speaker:took root, the island itself faced continual
Speaker:upheaval. Sintostatius, once
Speaker:a thriving hub of trade, became a pawn in a
Speaker:larger geopolitical chess game of colonial
Speaker:powers. The era following
Speaker:Rodney's occupation was marked by a relentless back
Speaker:and forth struggle for control. We now return
Speaker:to Mrs. M. Soutikau, who continues the timeline of
Speaker:Syntostacia's history.
Speaker:>> Ms. Sutekau: The French came in and rescued us, uh, in
Speaker:1784. By 1790,
Speaker:we had built all of that back
Speaker:1790 Stacia
Speaker:population, as well as the
Speaker:amount of trade, was the highest it ever
Speaker:was. Unfortunately, in
Speaker:1794, the French were to capture
Speaker:us again, close the warehouses
Speaker:down. From 1794 to
Speaker:1816, Stacia was
Speaker:played volleyball back and forth between the English
Speaker:and the French, with the Dutch only being able to rule a
Speaker:few years. Prosperity
Speaker:died.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): Rodney's occupation wasn't the end of Sintostatia's
Speaker:struggles. Between 1781 and
Speaker:1816, the island became a pawn in a larger
Speaker:geopolitical battle of Europe. Repeating
Speaker:invasions by British and French, coupled with
Speaker:declining trade, marked the beginning of the island's
Speaker:economic and social decline. Once
Speaker:celebrated as the golden Rock,
Speaker:Sintostatius faced a grim future as its
Speaker:prosperity faded into memory.
Speaker:Amongst this turbulence, the enslaved population was
Speaker:not passive. While the island's economy,
Speaker:fortune declined rapidly, its enslaved
Speaker:community was undergoing significant
Speaker:transformation. Freedom was being
Speaker:gained, new roles were emerging, and the
Speaker:cultural shift was beginning to take root.
Speaker:Questions of, uh, freedom, identity and
Speaker:resilience grew increasingly significant
Speaker:as some enslaved individual carved out spaces
Speaker:of autonomy and began to influence the island's
Speaker:cultural and social fabric. To
Speaker:understand how these changes reshaped stacia's enslaved
Speaker:community, Mr. Tutakow continues.
Speaker:>> Ms. Sutekau: A lot was happening with them. Um, there
Speaker:were a lot of slaves that were
Speaker:gaining their own freedom. We know that there
Speaker:were quite a few freed slaves on station.
Speaker:There were some slaves that were actually
Speaker:beginning to work with the government, with
Speaker:the authorities. One of those
Speaker:slaves, a, uh, former freed slave,
Speaker:was actually the whipper of
Speaker:our founder of our Methodist
Speaker:religion. Like Harry,
Speaker:the man who whipped him was A former slave.
Speaker:There were slaves who were escaping. There were
Speaker:slaves who were able to buy their
Speaker:freedom. Um, there were slaves
Speaker:that had professions. Those people
Speaker:were often recognized for their profession.
Speaker:Some of the slaves on the waterfront, many of
Speaker:them evidently learned how to read and write,
Speaker:because oftentimes when they had, uh, run
Speaker:away, there would be advertisements directed to those
Speaker:slaves in the paper saying, if you will return
Speaker:home, you won't be
Speaker:punished. So a lot was going
Speaker:on. They were getting more involved in the
Speaker:religions. That was the time Methodism
Speaker:started here on the island, which was at the
Speaker:beginning just the religion of the
Speaker:slave. By, uh, the time
Speaker:Methodism really was going in the early
Speaker:1800s, there were white people on
Speaker:the island who had joined that religion.
Speaker:They were mostly Catholic. They were practicing
Speaker:probably some of their own religion. A lot of that we don't
Speaker:know. We'd love to learn more about it, and
Speaker:hopefully that's going to be done.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): As the island's social fabric shifted, the stories of
Speaker:the enslaved population became intertwined
Speaker:with the broader colonial struggles.
Speaker:While the resilience of the enslaved people shaped
Speaker:Synthesia's history, their experience
Speaker:often remain hidden from the mainstream historical
Speaker:narrative. We now turn
Speaker:to Dr. Elaine, historian and
Speaker:teacher, who will provide a broader regional
Speaker:perspective on the experience of enslaved women and their
Speaker:roles in the resistance, as well as how these
Speaker:narratives played into the larger abolition movement.
Speaker:>> Dr. Elaine: And, um, because this was the 18th
Speaker:century, direct allusions to sexual
Speaker:violence were rare. But a lot of abolitionist
Speaker:material sort of indirectly referenced the sexual
Speaker:assault of enslaved women.
Speaker:Abolitionists knew that homing in on the treatment
Speaker:of enslaved women would provoke a lot of
Speaker:outrage. Even though the British public did
Speaker:not see black women as sort of proper
Speaker:women in the sense that, you
Speaker:know, bourgeois, white European women
Speaker:were proper women, they did think that
Speaker:assaulting women of any race was
Speaker:barbaric. So all of this is to say
Speaker:enslaved women featured heavily in
Speaker:abolitionist material. I'll
Speaker:also note that the movement to end Atlantic
Speaker:slavery ushered in a period known as
Speaker:amelioration in the British Caribbean.
Speaker:British abolitionists ran a very effective campaign
Speaker:to expose the horrors of slavery. And many
Speaker:members of the British public, even if they didn't really believe
Speaker:in the idea of racial equality, were
Speaker:appalled by stories of sexual
Speaker:torture, physical torture, et cetera, that
Speaker:characterized Atlantic slavery. Um,
Speaker:amelioration can largely be
Speaker:conceptualized as a cluster of
Speaker:legislation intended to kind of
Speaker:soften and humanize slavery, a sort of
Speaker:PR campaign that was ultimately intended
Speaker:to prolong slavery.
Speaker:>> Unidentified (Podcast Host): As we close part two of Golden Rock Dreams and
Speaker:Nightmares, we reflect on a time when
Speaker:syntastacia stood at the heart of a global
Speaker:conflict, the island's wealth and
Speaker:strategic importance placed itself at the center
Speaker:of American Revolutionary War and
Speaker:European colonial rivalries. Yet
Speaker:beneath the surface of these grand narratives lies
Speaker:the untold stories of those whose lives shaped and
Speaker:were shaped by these events.
Speaker:In the historical records, we often encounter
Speaker:women's stories only in fragments, and
Speaker:they're predominantly those of the elite women like Judith and
Speaker:Sarah, whose strategic marriages and
Speaker:inheritance allows them to navigate the structure
Speaker:of power. Their stories
Speaker:show how privilege operated within the inequalities
Speaker:of a patriarchal colonial system
Speaker:where even the most privileged women faced
Speaker:limitation tied to their gender.
Speaker:But what about the countless enslaved and marginalized
Speaker:women whose names
Speaker:history have not preserved?
Speaker:Their lives reveal another form of
Speaker:resilience, one rooted in
Speaker:survival, resistance, and the quiet
Speaker:defiance of a system built to oppress.
Speaker:This duality invites us to
Speaker:what can we learn from the struggles and agencies of
Speaker:these women, both privileged and
Speaker:oppressed? And how does
Speaker:understanding their lives inspire us to confront the
Speaker:inequalities that persist in our world
Speaker:today? As we move
Speaker:into the 19th century, we are left with many
Speaker:gaps and questions. Though our
Speaker:focus has been on syntastaceas, this
Speaker:island reflects the broader world, its
Speaker:struggles, inequalities, and
Speaker:transformation, mirroring global patterns.
Speaker:May we stay curious, seeking to understand
Speaker:the complexities of history,
Speaker:so that together we can make choices that lead to, um,
Speaker:a more humane world.