By tracing the largely forgotten eighteenth-century migration of
elite mixed-race individuals from Jamaica to Great Britain,
Children of Uncertain Fortune reinterprets the evolution of
British racial ideologies as a matter of negotiating family
membership. Using wills, legal petitions, family correspondences,
and inheritance lawsuits, Daniel Livesay is the first scholar to
follow the hundreds of children born to white planters and
Caribbean women of color who crossed the ocean for educational
opportunities, professional apprenticeships, marriage prospects, or
refuge from colonial prejudices.
The presence of these elite children of color in Britain pushed
popular opinion in the British Atlantic world toward narrower
conceptions of race and kinship. Members of Parliament, colonial
assemblymen, merchant kings, and cultural arbiters--the very people
who decided Britain's colonial policies, debated abolition, passed
marital laws, and arbitrated inheritance disputes--rubbed shoulders
with these mixed-race Caribbean migrants in parlors and sitting
rooms. Upper-class Britons also resented colonial transplants and
coveted their inheritances; family intimacy gave way to racial
exclusion. By the early nineteenth century, relatives had become
strangers.