Global Information Lookup Global Information

Mayorasgo de Koka information


Map of Mayorasgo de Koka drawn by Zephaniah Kingsley.[1]: 95 

Mayorasgo de Koka (literally Primogeniture of Coca, or the Entailed Estate of the Coca family) was a 35,000-acre (140 km2) tract of land in northeastern Hispaniola, then under Haitian rule. After renting the rights of the land from the Haitian government in 1837, Zephaniah Kingsley purchased it in 1838. As white people were barred from land ownership in Haiti[2]: 93  the estate was titled in the name of Zephaniah's eldest biracial son George Kingsley, whose mother was Kingsley's recognized African-born wife Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley. Today the site is located in the province of Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic.

Beginning in 1828, the legislature of the new U.S. Territory of Florida passed a series of laws that progressively removed the rights that free persons of color had enjoyed in Spanish Florida. After failed attempts at stopping these laws through politics and advocacy, Kingsley moved his mixed-"race" family—as well as a total of 53 former slaves which he freed from his plantations in Florida—to the estate.[1] The former slaves became indentured servants. There they were guaranteed equality by the laws of the Republic of Haiti, the first independent country in the world established by former African slaves. Anna Kingsley lived there from 1838 to 1846, when she returned to Florida.

The economy of the estate was mostly agricultural and included some mahogany logging. As the number of Kingsley descendants grew, they turned to cattle grazing and further divided the property into smaller tracts of land. Some descendants moved to urban areas and gradually lost control of the land to peasant farmers. Today, some descendants of Zephaniah Kingsley as well as of his former Florida slaves still live in the area. The village of Cabaret, within the former plantation, is today the windsurfing tourist town of Cabarete.

There are no markers and no historic buildiings.

  1. ^ a b Schafer, Daniel L. (2003). Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley: African Princess, Florida Slave, Plantation Slaveowner. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-2616-9.
  2. ^ Stowell, Daniel, ed. (2000). Balancing Evils Judiciously: The Proslavery Writings of Zephaniah Kingsley. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-2400-5.

and 8 Related for: Mayorasgo de Koka information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8157 seconds.)

Mayorasgo de Koka

Last Update:

Mayorasgo de Koka (literally Primogeniture of Coca, or the Entailed Estate of the Coca family) was a 35,000-acre (140 km2) tract of land in northeastern...

Word Count : 358

Cabarete

Last Update:

founded in 1835 by the merchant Zephaniah Kingsley as part of his Mayorasgo de Koka estate, where he moved along with his mixed-race family and 53 slaves...

Word Count : 491

Zephaniah Kingsley

Last Update:

more insecure in Florida, he moved them to a vanished plantation, Mayorasgo de Koka, in what was then Haiti but soon became part of the Dominican Republic...

Word Count : 7352

Kingsley Plantation

Last Update:

plantation called Mayorasgo de Koka, at the time in Haiti but from the 1840s in the Dominican Republic. Little remains of Mayorasgo de Koka. Fort George Island...

Word Count : 6512

Coca

Last Update:

coca was cultivated in what is today the Dominican Republic (see Mayorasgo de Koka). In 2014, coca plantations were discovered in Mexico, and in 2020...

Word Count : 9220

Miscegenation

Last Update:

was eventually forced to leave the United States and move to the Mayorasgo de Koka plantation in Haiti (now Dominican Republic). In 1918, there was considerable...

Word Count : 40638

Slavery in the United States

Last Update:

Florida, and moved with his slaves and multiple wives to a plantation, Mayorasgo de Koka, in Haiti (now in the Dominican Republic). There were many others...

Word Count : 35087

Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley

Last Update:

employees moved with Kingsley to Haiti to farm a plantation called Mayorasgo de Koka. Because slavery was prohibited in Haiti, Kingsley converted his slaves...

Word Count : 3466

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net