The Blackwash

Exposing slave beneficiaries: Codrington & Betty’s Hope


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Smart reparations transforms an abstract concept into tangible justice. While traditional reparations discussions often stall due to their scope, targeting specific beneficiaries of slavery creates measurable, achievable goals that directly connect past exploitation to present wealth.

The Codrington family's ownership of Betty's Hope plantation in Antigua represents a perfect case study. From 1674 until 1944—yes, within living memory—this British family extracted enormous wealth from the labor of 1,539 enslaved people. When slavery was abolished, they received £25,000 (£2.5 million today) in "compensation" for losing ‘property’. This money, along with generations of plantation profits, funded their grand Doddington Park estate in Gloucestershire, which they sold in 1983 for over £1 million.

The wealth transfer is meticulously traceable. The family later sold their plantation archives—documents that rightfully belong to Antigua—for substantial sums when the Antiguan government couldn't afford them. Today, Betty's Hope stands as a museum, but restoration funds come from Germany and the US, not Britain or the Codringtons who morally owe this debt.

As the podcast concludes: you can't choose how you come into this world, but you can choose how you live in it. Will the Codringtons help repair the damage their ancestors caused?

Sign the petition at repair campaign to show solidarity with those whose labor built British wealth but who never saw its rewards.

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The BlackwashBy Kayne Kawasaki

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