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Slave Mortality in Nineteenth-Century Grenada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Jeffrey P. Koplan*
Affiliation:
Centers for Disease Control

Extract

The early nineteenth-century decrease in several West Indian slave populations has been a subject of intense interest among historians of the region, of slavery, and of population dynamics (Higman, 1973; Curtin, 1969). Further data on birth rates, death rates, causes of deaths, and quantity and quality of slave importation and migration will help explain the phenomenon of “natural decrease. “The slave registration records of the island of Grenada provide useful information on this piece of demographic history. The records enumerate slave births and deaths and list causes of death, signed by a physician. There are few published reports on death rates and causes of death in West Indian slave populations (Higman, 1973; Handler and Lange, 1978; Roberts, 1952). The purpose of this study is to describe the causes of death, estimate specific death rates, and construct a life-table for slaves in Grenada in 1818.

Type
Research Note
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 1983 

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Footnotes

I thank Richard Sheridan, Michael Ashcroft, Barry Higman, Barbara G. Rosenkrantz, the Milton Fund of Harvard University, Christine Cain, and Renee Shirley for their assistance. This article was written in my capacity as an employee of the United States Government; it is therefore in the public domain.

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