By Eron Henry

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Famous Jamaicans Bob Marley, Marcus Garvey and Claude McKay were all of African-Irish descent

Next to persons of African descent, the largest racial/ethnic group in Jamaica are of Irish ancestry. This is a surprise as many Jamaicans thought the next largest group to be East Indians.

It is doubtful most Jamaicans are of a single race or ethnicity, what with the racial mixing since European arrival in the late 15th century.  Unlike other countries, such as the United States, Jamaica does not pay keen attention to such things. One is not asked one’s race or ethnicity on official documents. One is Jamaican or isn’t.

My maternal grandmother, who was born in the 1880s and died in the 1990s, said her grandfather was a “Scotsman,” a term that can refer to a white Jamaican regardless of ethnicity. Granny and all her children, including my mother, were light skinned, so her assertion adds up. Whether my great-great-grandfather was English, Irish or actually a Scot, is not really known.

Irish slaves
A little-known fact is that Irish slaves were brought to the Caribbean by the British. This according to Herbert Byrd Jr. in his book, Proclamation 1625: America’s Enslavement of the Irish. Oliver Cromwell, who overthrew the British king Charles I, “placed tens of thousands of Irish in slavery and transported some to the mainland (North America) plantations; others were shipped to plantations in the West Indies.”

Enslaved Irish were part of the force that wrested Jamaica from Spain in 1655. Byrd said the expedition  “included many Irish slaves” from Barbados and St. Kitts (St. Christopher at the time). After the British took full control of Jamaica, “Cromwell, with his new island, had Irish slaves sent from Barbados and St. Christopher to work the new land.”

Others were brought directly from Ireland. As early as 1656, Cromwell ordered that 2,000 Irish children be taken to Jamaica and sold as slaves to English settlers. In The Irish Abroad, Elliott O’Donnell said “that 6,000 boys and girls were transported as slaves from Ireland to Jamaica, and that the total number transported there and to Virginia amounted to 10,000.”

According to Byrd,  English “slave owners bred the African males with the Irish women and girls” in the North American colonies. African-Irish enslaved persons, it is alleged, fetched a higher sale price than those who were purely African or Irish.

Ray Cavanaugh claimed this was practiced in Jamaica for a similar, but slightly different reason. “Rather than spending money on new slaves, the Jamaican plantation owners began mating Irish females with African men to create a new breed of slave that, in the Caribbean climate, was a more apt labourer, and thus commanded a higher value than full-blooded ‘Irish livestock’” (Sláinte Mon – The Irish of Jamaica).

Jamaica-Irish solidarity
English oppression of the Irish gave rise to feelings of affinity between Irish and black Jamaicans. Irishman Richard Robert Madden, “who left his profitable career as a doctor in London…was appointed a Special Magistrate in Jamaica where he oversaw the abolition of slavery in 1834,” wrote librarian and historian, Liam Hogan. “He was hated by the planters there (now former slaveowners) as he doggedly defended the emancipated slaves new rights by making site inspections and ensuring that they were treated as equals in his court. After much intimidation, threats and eventually a violent assault in the street, he had to resign his position.”

Madden discovered he had black enslaved relatives in Jamaica. Close family resemblances of black Jamaicans with his Irish family confirmed their common ancestral heritage. “Undoubtedly, the unforeseen encounter with his Jamaican relatives had a profound impact on Madden, infusing him with an even greater desire to eradicate slavery in all its forms,” said Hogan.

The Madden name is well known in Jamaica. A branch of the family owns  one of the oldest and largest funeral businesses on the island.

It is believed Marcus Mosiah Garvey, who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association in August 1914, had Irish ancestry. The Irish Rising of 1916 appeared to have a profound impact on and influenced the Jamaican National Hero.

The Rising on Easter in April 1916 is a pivotal event in Irish history. It led to partition and the creation of the independent Republic of Ireland. The rest of the island became Northern Island, a colony of Britain, which has had a long struggle for independence from Britain and reunification with the Irish republic.

In Black and Green: The Fight for Civil Rights in Northern Ireland & Black America, Brian Dooley said “Garvey was one of several black nationalists who studied and admired the Irish Republican approach. Garvey’s Irish influences had begun as early as 1910, when he was assistant secretary of the National Club of Jamaica, whose founder, S.A.G. Cox, had admired the Sinn Fein movement while studying in the early years of the century.”

Dooley contended that “Garvey based many of his black nationalist ideas on the Irish model.” Noted Garvey scholar Robert Hill said as much in The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers. “Far more than any other nationalist struggle, the Irish revolutionary struggle assisted in focusing Garvey’s political perspective.” Hill indicated that “even the slogan made famous by Garvey, ‘Africa for the Africans at home and abroad,’ echoed the oft-repeated Irish slogan, ‘the Irish race at home and abroad.’”

Irish influences
Irish last names are common in Jamaica – Burke, Clarke, Collins, Lynch, Murphy, Walsh. Any name with the prefixes “Mc” – McKenzie, McDonald, McCall, McMorris, McMillan, etc.; and “O’” – O’Brien, O’Connor, O’Hara, O’Meally, etc.

Another famous Jamaican of Irish extract is Bob Marley, who had a white father and black mother, both Jamaicans. Jamaica’s first prime minister, Alexander Bustamante, who changed his last name from Clarke, was of Irish ancestry. So was the island’s most famous poet of the early 20th century, Claude McKay, a leader of the Harlem Renaissance in New York in the 1920s.

Strong Irish influence is evident in place names. Irish Town and Dublin Castle in St. Andrew; Irish Pen and Sligoville in St. Catherine; Athenry and Bangor Ridge in Portland; Clonmel and Kildare in St. Mary; Belfast and Middleton in St. Thomas; and Ulster Spring in Trelawny.

The Jamaica Constabulary Force, formed in 1866, is believed to have been modeled off the Irish police force, including the “red seam” that runs down the side of the trousers.

Persons with a keen ear claim there are similarities between the accent of Jamaican and other Caribbean citizens, and the Irish. As one Irish noted, “Jamaicans always sound like they’re from Cork to me!” Cork is a university city in southwest Ireland. The United Kingdom comedian and actor, Lenny Henry, whose parents were born in Jamaica, described Ireland as “Jamaica in the cold.”

There is strong suggestion that the Irish gave Jamaicans their highly colorful, and beloved, curse words, those of the various “cloth” varieties. If true, it is an enduring legacy bequeathed by the Emerald Isle. The Irish, it appears, taught Jamaicans to curse in a manner  no others can.

Eron Henry is author of Constitutionally Religious: What the Constitutions of 180 Countries Say About Religion and Belief and the novelReverend Mother.