Forged for Sugar
The Bitter Side of Sweet
In
18th-century Barbados, cane sugar was made in cast-iron syrup kettles,
a technique later embraced
in the American South. Sugarcane was squashed
using wind and animal-powered mills. The drawn
out juice was heated, clarified, and
vaporized in a series of cast-iron kettles of
decreasing size to create crystallized
sugar.
Barbados
Sugar Economy: A Tragic Success. The
beginning of the "plantation system"
changed the island's economy.
Large estates owned by wealthy planters
dominated the landscape, with enslaved
Africans offering the labour required to
sustain the demanding process of planting,
harvesting, and processing sugarcane. This system
produced immense wealth for
the nest and solidified its place as a
key player in the Atlantic trade. But African slaves toiled in perilous
conditions, and many died in the infamous Boiling room, as you will see
next:
Boiling Sugar: A Grueling Job
Sugar
production in the 17th and 18th
centuries was a perilous process. After
harvesting and squashing the
sugarcane, its juice was boiled in massive cast iron
kettles till it crystallized into sugar. These pots, frequently
organized in a series called a"" train"" were
heated by blazing fires that workers needed to stir
constantly. The heat was
extreme, and the work
unrelenting. Enslaved employees withstood
long hours, typically standing near
to the inferno, running the risk of burns and
exhaustion. Splashes of the boiling liquid were not
unusual and might cause
severe, even fatal, injuries.
By
acknowledging the hazardous labour of
enslaved Africans, we honour their contributions and sacrifices.
Barbados" sugar industry, built on their backs, formed
the island's history and economy. As we admire the
relics of this period, we need to
also remember the people whose
work and durability made it
possible. Their story is a vital part of comprehending not simply the history of
Barbados however the more comprehensive history of
the Caribbean and the worldwide effect
of the sugar trade.
If you come across pot in
a tranquil cliffs or museum,
remember that it is more than an ornamental piece. It is a
reminder of the the slaves who tended the
boiling sugar, the lives that sustained,
and the durability that continues to
influence.
HISTORICAL RECORDS!
Proof of The Deadly Reality of the Sugar Boiling House
Historical
accounts, such as those by abolitionist James Ramsay,
uncover the surprise
horrors of Caribbean sugar plantations. Enslaved
workers endured extreme heat
and the consistent danger of
falling under boiling barrels-- a grim reality of
plantation life.
{
The Bitter Side of Sweet |The Hidden Side of
Sugar: |Sweetness Forged in Fire:
The Sugar-Boiling Legacy |
Molten Memories: The Iron Pots of Sugar's Past |
The Iron Heart of Barbados' Sugar
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