[WORK IN PROGRESS - WE WILL BE ADDING TO THIS BLOG POST!]
The genesis of Philippine was quite serendipitous. I was working on the story of the Philip family when, on 2 February, 2019, by happy coincidence, Peter Redhead got in touch with me from his home in the United States. He was curious about my story about "Jeanette, Free Negro Woman" on this blog. I was working with the secondary sources by Kit Candlin and Lorna McDaniel for my draft about the family, and passed these sources on to him.
Little did I know that I would have met a kindred spirit in Peter Redhead had been born in Grenada, and lived on Petite Martinique with his grandmother for a couple of years, who told him lots of stories about the Philips. Working in the world of academia in the US, and having done extensive research himself, he knew his way around archives that housed a plethora of original documents from the Caribbean islands.
In utter generosity of spirit, Peter Redhead did me—and the readers of Philippine—an amazing service. For over two years, he emailed me hitherto very little known scans of a large number of historical documents that he himself had painstakingly searched, found, decyphered and often translated from French, in numerous repositories in the US. All throughout the COVID lockdown, we corresponded. In what must have been hundreds of emails regarding the Philip family, so many of my questions were answered, mistakes by other researchers corrected, and needless to say, his cornucopia of documents caused me to re-write and re-write and RE-WRITE a lot of the text!
It was, to say the least, the most exciting and rewarding way to work on a book. Peter Redhead, along with my local editors here in Trinidad, read many of the early drafts, and having done so he often sent me additional information that would correct either details or even large aspects of the narrative. It became my ambition to incorporate all the facts that he sent me faithfully into the book, and they now form the structure of the work to which I applied my imagination in the interpretation of the history of those times, filling in characterisations, dialogue, plot etc.
Philippine, as the printed book, carries a QR code to lead to this blog post for readers interested in a selection of the documents from Peter Redhead's treasure trove. What follows are the visuals of the documents, with explanations as to their significance in the text, and where they formed incontrovertible proof of new insights into the Philip family, hitherto unknown to or misinterpreted by previous researchers.
Enjoy, and to my friend Peter Redhead many many thanks!" (Gérard A. Besson, 28 November 2022)
[Note: Gérard A. Besson died on 25 July 2023. His last books, "Philippine" Vols. 1 and 2 were published in September 2024]
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Page 364: "Then you, Edmund and the children departed for England. I understood. The investments. Property in London. Speculation on Lime Street. Investments in the wharves being constructed at the Port of London to accommodate the importation of sugar from the Ceded Islands, now in astonishing quantities. Investments made by Edmund and James Baillie with the proceeds of father’s loot they said would pay our way for another three generations and some. I left Cécile in charge of the house at Gran’Anse and moved to Petite Anse. You appointed Duncan Campbell, James Baillie and me to be your attorneys in charge of all the estates and all our affairs here on Carriacou, on Petite Martinique and in Grenada. Honoré sulked and became increasingly absent."
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Page 436: "The letter was written by a man who signed his name Magloire, whom Honorine had married. He was looking to see what they could get from us. The other letter was written on behalf of Venus Meillézande, who is originally from St. Vincent and whose child is called Betsy, who inquired if there was anything coming to her for the child, Honoré being dead these seven years. Our dear brother had, it would appear, relationships with both Anne and Venus at the same time, and from the ages of their children, who are now grown women!"
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In 1792 Judith Philip was mentioned in an indenture with Edmund Thornton: