Pleasant Hill (Q491977)

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Revision as of 18:02, 8 July 2020 by Seila Gonzalez (talk | contribs) (‎Created claim: Property:P59: 17°55'33.766"N, 76°17'29.173"W, #quickstatements; batch #387 by User:Seila Gonzalez)
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LBS-PLA-EST-00389
  • LBS-PLA-EST-00389
  • LBS-PLA-EST-e203
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Pleasant Hill
LBS-PLA-EST-00389
  • LBS-PLA-EST-00389
  • LBS-PLA-EST-e203

Statements

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JM
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Pleasant Hill plantation was situated about 2½ miles from Port Morant in the rich, fertile sugar district of St. Thomas in the East, a south-eastern Jamaican parish. Pleasant Hill comprised about 985 acres, including 350 acres in cane and pasturage. In the early 1760s it had 120 enslaved people and was expected to make 100 hogsheads (approx. 90,000 kilogrammes) of sugar and 50-60 puncheons (approx
. 26,000-31,000 litres) of rum per year. It had both a cattle mill and a water mill.
17°55'33.766"N, 76°17'29.173"W
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