Difference between revisions of "Byde Mill (Q492473)"
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(Added reference to claim: hasDescription (P66): 1746 it came into the hands of Sir Stephen Anderson of England as committee of Henry Roberts who had been declared a lunatic. Note that the plantation straddled the parishes of St. George, St. John and St. Philip., #quickstatements; batch #379 by User:Seila Gonzalez) |
(Added reference to claim: hasDescription (P66): The first evidence of the Byde Mill planation appears to have been in 1670 when Richard Bendyshe leased it to Thomas Batson: it was of 360 acres with 125 enslaved people and 8 bond (indentured) servants. In 1717 it was bequeathed by Sir Henry Bendyshe to his nephew Henry Roberts. Between 1717 and 1746 the ownership of the plantation descended through 2 generations of sons of the Roberts family. In, #quickstatements; [[:toollabs:quickstatements/#/b...) |
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Property / hasDescription: The first evidence of the Byde Mill planation appears to have been in 1670 when Richard Bendyshe leased it to Thomas Batson: it was of 360 acres with 125 enslaved people and 8 bond (indentured) servants. In 1717 it was bequeathed by Sir Henry Bendyshe to his nephew Henry Roberts. Between 1717 and 1746 the ownership of the plantation descended through 2 generations of sons of the Roberts family. In / reference | |||
Revision as of 18:05, 29 June 2020
LBS-PLA-EST-01291
- LBS-PLA-EST-01291
- LBS-PLA-EST-e670
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English |
Byde Mill
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LBS-PLA-EST-01291
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Statements
Byde Mill
BB
0 references
The first evidence of the Byde Mill planation appears to have been in 1670 when Richard Bendyshe leased it to Thomas Batson: it was of 360 acres with 125 enslaved people and 8 bond (indentured) servants. In 1717 it was bequeathed by Sir Henry Bendyshe to his nephew Henry Roberts. Between 1717 and 1746 the ownership of the plantation descended through 2 generations of sons of the Roberts family. In
1746 it came into the hands of Sir Stephen Anderson of England as committee of Henry Roberts who had been declared a lunatic. Note that the plantation straddled the parishes of St. George, St. John and St. Philip.