Amaryllis Collymore
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Amaryllis Collymore (c. 1745–1828) was an
Afro-Barbadian Black Barbadians or Afro-Barbadians are Barbados, Barbadians of entirely or predominantly Black people, African descent. 92.4% of Barbados's population is black and 3.1% is multiracial people, multiracial, based on estimates in 2010. Origins ...
slave who gained her freedom from her relationship with a white man. The couple had eleven children and she successfully ran a plantation allowing her to acquire numerous other properties, to become the wealthiest free black woman in the colony at the time of her death.


Life

Amaryllis Renn Phillips was born into slavery in 1745 on
Barbados Barbados, officially the Republic of Barbados, is an island country in the Atlantic Ocean. It is part of the Lesser Antilles of the West Indies and the easternmost island of the Caribbean region. It lies on the boundary of the South American ...
, during British colonial rule where records indicate she was a mulatto. She was purchased by Robert Collymore in 1780, from Rebecca Phillips, a free coloured hotelier, along with her five mulatto children, four of whom were Robert's children. In 1784, Robert arranged their manumission by selling her and the children to a friend, James Scuffield. Selling a slave to a trusted third-party to avoid high manumission fees was a common practice during the period in Barbados. Robert acquired ''Lightfoots'', a 42-acre sugar plantation with its 44 slaves, to provide for her and the children. Collymore expanded the estate to over a hundred acres and was able to buy seven properties throughout
Bridgetown Bridgetown (UN/LOCODE: BB BGI) is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Barbados. Formerly The Town of Saint Michael, the Greater Bridgetown area is located within the Parishes of Barbados, parish of Saint Michael, Barbados, Saint Mic ...
, on Canary Street, High Street and James Street, which she rented out. She also ran a successful shop. By 1805, Collymore owned another property, on Roebuck Street, which she sold for £800. She and her daughter, Katherine Anne Collymore, were the recipients of a bequest from Renn Phillips in his 1809 will. In 1824, when Robert died, he bequeathed she and her eleven children, full title to ''Lightfoots'' and the slaves working on the plantation. Among her children, besides Katherine were Frances Lasley, Margaret Jane, and Robert (baptized 18 February 1792), Thomazin Ashby (baptized 6 June 1795), Elizabeth Clarke (baptized 13 June 1798), Samuel Francis Collymore, Jackson Brown Collymore and Renn Phillips Collymore, who would become the great-great grandfather of Frank Collymore. Collymore's will, dated 1826 (or 1829 but which was probably the date the estate was probated), left her estate, worth over £10,000 to relatives. She devised a home in Bridgetown and a plantation known as Haggat Hall, and 67 slaves, as well as silver and personal property. At the time of her death she was "the richest free woman of color in pre-emancipation Barbados".


Death and legacy

Collymore died on 16 December 1828 and was buried in the St. Mary's Churchyard in
Bridgetown Bridgetown (UN/LOCODE: BB BGI) is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Barbados. Formerly The Town of Saint Michael, the Greater Bridgetown area is located within the Parishes of Barbados, parish of Saint Michael, Barbados, Saint Mic ...
. The house that Collymore and her children occupied is now the Morningside Building, and houses the Arts Department of the
Barbados Community College The Barbados Community College is a tertiary institution located on Eyrie Howells' Road, Saint Michael, Barbados. History Founded in 1968, the Barbados Community College came to be as a result of an Act of Parliament aimed at making post seco ...
.


See also

Other former enslaved women who became slave-owners in Barbados: * Rachael Pringle Polgreen * Susannah Ostrehan *
Dorothy Thomas (entrepreneur) Dorothy Thomas (also known as Dolly Kirwan or Doll Thomas; 1756 – 5 August 1846) was a Caribbean entrepreneur and former slave who engaged in business in Montserrat, Dominica, Grenada, Barbados, and Demerara. Having purchased her own manumiss ...


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* * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Collymore, Amaryllis 1740s births 1828 deaths African diaspora in Barbados Planters from the British West Indies Barbadian slaves Barbadian slave owners 18th-century British businesspeople 19th-century British businesspeople 18th-century British businesswomen 19th-century British businesswomen Women slave owners