White Jamaicans
White Jamaicans are Jamaicans whose ancestry lies within the continent of Europe, most notably Great Britain, Ireland,[2] Spain, Germany[3] and Portugal.[4] In 2018, the population was said to be 12,382 people, equating to 0.4% of the overall population. Historically White Jamaicans made up a much larger percentage of the population, forming a majority for most of the 17th century.[1]
Total population | |
---|---|
12,382 (0.4% of the total population), according to the 2018 census[1] | |
Languages | |
English, Jamaican Patois, Spanish, Portuguese, other | |
Religion | |
Christianity, Judaism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
White Caribbeans, English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish, Spanish, German, Portuguese, Jews |
Terminology
A number of Jamaicans have light skin, European features, and majority European ancestry. In colonial times it was common for such people to identify simply as "white", but since independence it has been more common for them to identify as "brown" or "mulatto". In modern Jamaica the category "white" is applied. For instance, four of the first six Jamaican heads of government (Norman Manley, Alexander Bustamante, Edward Seaga, and Michael Manley) had a European appearance and majority Caucasian ancestry, but were not generally considered "white" within Jamaica. Foreign writers applying their own countries' racial standards would sometimes identify them as white – writing for The New York Times, Nicholas Kristof observed that a "95 per cent black population elected a white man – Edward Seaga – as its prime minister". Seaga was born to a Lebanese father and a mixed-race mother.[5]
Demographic history
The proportion of white people among the overall population in Jamaica has varied considerably since the establishment of a permanent Spanish settlement in 1509 by Juan de Esquivel. The native Taíno people were virtually extinct by 1600 and the island's population of about 3,000 was then overwhelmingly European. However, over the next century a significant numbers of African slaves were brought to the island. Jamaica became a colony of England in 1655 and a census in 1662 recorded 3,653 whites (87% of the population) and 552 blacks (13% of the population). However, by 1673 there were 7,768 whites (45% of the population) and 9,504 blacks (55% of the population). By the end of the century only about 7,000 out of a total population of 47,000 (or 15%) were white. Most white immigrants were British, many coming voluntarily from other North American colonies or as refugees from colonies like Montserrat and Suriname, which were captured by other European powers. There were also thousands (estimated at 50,000) of Irish people slave traded to Jamaica (Sean O'Callaghan, To Hell or Barbados: The ethnic cleansing of Ireland Paperback) in the early years of the colony.[6]
By 1734, the proportion of white people had decreased to below 10% of the overall population of Jamaica.[6] In 1774, Edward Long estimated that a third of Jamaica's white population were Scottish, mostly concentrated in Westmoreland Parish.[7] In 1787, there were only 12,737 whites out of a total population of 209,617.[6] There was a flow of French refugees to Jamaica after the Haitian Revolution, though not all remained in the country. In the 1830s, over 1,000 Germans immigrated to Jamaica to work on Lord Seaford's estate. The 1844 census showed a white population of 15,776 out of a total population of 377,433 (around 4%).[6] According to the 1871 census, at least 25% of the population was coloured (having mixed black and white ancestry).[8]
The 1960 census recorded a white population of 0.77 percent, which decreased to 0.66 in 1970, 0.18 in 2001, and 0.16 in 2011.[9] As with most Anglo-Caribbean countries, most Jamaicans who are of mixed ancestry self-report as 'black'.[10][11] In 2011, the CIA World Factbook estimated that the population of Jamaicans who are of mixed European and African ancestry is at about 96%.[12]
Notable White Jamaicans
- Gerry Alexander (1928–2011), West Indies cricket captain
- Peter Beckford (junior) (1672–1735), politician
- William Beckford (1709–1770), plantation owner, Lord Mayor of London
- Martine Beswick (b. 1941), actress, Bond girl
- Cindy Breakspeare (b. 1954), model, Miss World 1976
- Frederic G. Cassidy (1907–2000), editor of the Dictionary of Jamaican English and the Dictionary of American Regional English
- Alexander J. Dallas (1759–1817), U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
- George Ellis (1753–1815), writer
- Gloria Escoffery (1923–2002), painter
- Henry Fowler (1915–2007), educator, chairman of the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation
- Guy Harvey (b. 1955), conservationist and artist
- Perry Henzell (1936–2006), film director
- Lewis Hutchinson (1733–1773), serial killer
- Agnes Macdonald, 1st Baroness Macdonald of Earnscliffe
- Francis Moncrieff Kerr-Jarrett (1885–1968), businessman
- William Knibb (1803–1845), Baptist missionary, first white man to receive Jamaican Order of Merit
- Karl Nunes (1894–1958), inaugural West Indies cricket captain and president of the West Indies Cricket Board of Control
- Edward Long (1734–1813), writer, author of the History of Jamaica
- Edna Manley (1900–1987), sculptor and mother of Prime Minister Michael Manley
- Evelyn O'Callaghan (b. 1954), professor of West Indian literature at the University of the West Indies
- Arthur William Savage (May 13, 1857 - Sep 22, 1938) Founder of Savage Arms and Inventor of radial tires as well as new production methods.
- Adam Stewart (b. 1981), businessman
- Gordon "Butch" Stewart (b. 1941), businessman, founder of Sandals Resorts and Beaches Resorts
- Cicely Williams (1893–1992), medical researcher, discoverer of kwashiorkor
- Sean Paul (Recording Artist)
See also
References
- 2011 census report
- "Out Of Many Cultures The People Who Came The Arrival Of The Irish". Jamaica Gleaner. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Out Of Many Cultures The People Who Came The Arrival Of The GERMANS". Jamaica Gleaner. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Out Of Many Cultures: The People Who Came The Jews In Jamaica". Jamaica Gleaner. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Not completely black and white". Jamaica Gleaner. 4 October 2009. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
- Historial Background, Jamaican Family Search.
- "Jamaica In Britain: Mulatto Abolitionist". Jamaica Gleaner. 3 December 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
- Handbook of Jamaica. Google Books: Jamaica Government. 1908. p. 37.
- Race and Ethnicity Matter in Jamaica? Category Labels versus Personal Self- descriptions of Identity, ResearchGate, 2007
- "5 Reasons Many Jamaicans Don't Understand Racism". Jamaicans Magazine. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Out of Many One People, We Are A Race Apart". Jamaicans Magazine. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Jamaica - CIA World Factbook". Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 5 March 2018.