Introduction
In an account entitled The West Indies in 1837, Joseph Sturge and Thomas Harvey depicted an Anglican clergyman whom they considered to have atypical sympathies: ‘one of those who has ever manifested a sympathy with the oppressed, and is consequently, together with other estimable clergymen of the establishment, deemed “worse than a Baptist”.’Footnote 1 The subject of their account, the Rev. John Stainsby (1782–1854), held his position as an Anglican incumbent in Jamaica for over thirty years.Footnote 2 Working with enslaved people and witnessing their transition to apprenticeship and freedom, it was in Jamaica that Stainsby's ‘sympathies’ took root.Footnote 3 In view of this, Stainsby's listing in the Legacies of British Slavery Database is perhaps unexpected. Together with his wife, he is recorded as having received £646 18s. 1d. in compensation for the freeing of thirty-six enslaved people in 1836.Footnote 4 The entry observes this apparent contradiction, describing Stainsby's slave-ownership as ‘striking’ because ‘he was renowned as prominent campaigner for the improvement in conditions of the enslaved and for their religious instruction’.Footnote 5
This article argues an alternative view. It suggests that Stainsby's enslaver status was not antithetical to his dedication to religious instruction and conversion in the Caribbean. Rather, it demonstrates how ‘sympathizing’ Anglican missionaries in the Caribbean, such as Stainsby, had to abstain from the issue of emancipation in order to maintain good relations with the plantocracy and thus further their missionary calling. In doing so, it argues that such missionaries became an integral part of the British Government's movement, throughout the 1820s, for the amelioration of the conditions of enslaved people. This focused assessment of Stainsby's intense involvement in Anglican missionary affairs in Jamaica reveals how dishonesties and concealed beliefs advanced the expansion of Anglican missions in the Caribbean.
With the exception of Adam Thomas's assessment of a slander case – to which Stainsby and another missionary named Samuel Oughton were parties – Stainsby's influence in Jamaica has largely gone unobserved.Footnote 6 By contrast, Anglican missionary activity during the period of amelioration has seen a recent surge of interest, which has served to nuance and complicate current understandings of relationships between missionaries and enslaved people.Footnote 7 In Agency of the Enslaved, Daive Dunkley examined the baptisms and religious instruction of enslaved people under the established Church of England and its missionary agencies, including the Church Missionary Society (CMS). He argued that the creation of the missionary education system ‘was an indication of the power of slave freedom’.Footnote 8 Dunkley considered how Anglican missionaries aligned with the plantocracy, and posited that enslaved people maintained agency and autonomy in missionary interactions.Footnote 9 Anglican clergy in the Anglophone Caribbean more widely have been approached mainly through the study of resident clergy and their relations with enslavers. In an evaluation of breaches of the social norms of slave society, Matthew Strickland explored the actions of William Marshall Harte, an Anglican clergyman in Barbados, who was fined for preaching material that might ‘hinder the enslaver-enslaved power dynamic.’Footnote 10 Strickland situates arguments surrounding Harte's actions in the wider context of amelioration through religious instruction sought by the British government in the 1820s.Footnote 11 By considering how Stainsby traversed these complex and important enslaver-enslaved dynamics, this article builds on Strickland's analysis. It demonstrates that the complexities of amelioration resulted in tensions as missionaries deceived others about their beliefs to align with ameliorative, Christian incentives.
Anna Johnston has examined missionary texts more generally, arguing that they are propagandist in nature because they were written to ‘ensure an on-going supply of donated funds’.Footnote 12 In their writings, missionaries enforced ‘colonial visions’ by emphasizing the notion of the ‘heathen’ to justify their conversion attempts.Footnote 13 This article draws on Johnston's analysis by examining missionary correspondence, whilst considering the motivations of the writer, alongside published education materials and colonial slave registers, to understand Stainsby's influence in nineteenth-century Jamaica. It firstly examines two key sites of contention between religious instruction and the planter class – Sunday markets and baptism – showing that Stainsby used deception to reconcile his religious duties and colonial law. It then considers the motivations and actions of The Conversion Society and the CMS more generally, discussing the material provided to missionaries to support their educational mission. Finally, it explores Stainsby's role as an enslaver. Through consideration of Stainsby's attitudes towards his own slave-ownership, it points to Stainsby's assimilation into the plantocracy. Overall, it argues that Stainsby engaged in acts of hypocrisy and suppression to avoid curtailing the growth of mission and, in so doing, perpetuated a form of pro-slavery Christianity that was used by himself and the societies who employed him.Footnote 14
Ordination and Mission
John Stainsby was born in 1782 in Low Coniscliffe, County Durham. Little is known about his life prior to his ordination, although we can gather that he remained single until then.Footnote 15 He was ordained deacon on 17 May 1818 and priested on 30 August the same year, with a view to becoming a missionary for the Incorporated Society for the Conversion and Religious Instruction of the British West India Negro Slaves.Footnote 16 The Society was a rejuvenation of the Christian Faith Society, originally founded in 1691 from assets left by the natural philosopher Robert Boyle.Footnote 17 The charity experienced a partial suspension of income during the American War of Independence (1775–83), which encouraged its trustees to find an alternative use for the income flowing from Boyle's Brafferton estate in Yorkshire. The alternative which was found was The Conversion Society, which was reconstituted in 1794 under the presidency of the then bishop of London, Beilby Porteus, until his death in 1809. Samuel Hinds, the future bishop of Norwich, became its president in 1809, until his resignation in 1822.Footnote 18 The Society's first stationed missionary was the Rev. James Curtin, who remained the principal missionary in the Caribbean until Stainsby's arrival in Jamaica in 1818.Footnote 19
Stainsby was evidently eager to start his new position, making an inquiry to the bishop of London, by now William Howley, as to when his mission for The Conversion Society would begin. In his letter, he wrote:
As many weeks have passed over since my ordination, and as the time of my proposed departure from my native country across the Atlantic to communicate those blessings to our fellow subjects, the Negroes, which God's eternal son came down to this our World to reveal and work out for sinful man, I hope I may be pardoned the liberty I now take in writing to your Lordship to enquire if anything further has been settled respecting me by the ‘Society for the Conversion of Negro slaves in the British West India Islands.’ I rather expected to hear from Mr Porteus previous to this, but have not.Footnote 20
Stainsby did not have long to wait. On 20 October 1818, he was appointed by Howley as ‘a missionary in the Island of Jamaica to which [he was] duly appointed by the Society for the Conversion and Religious Instruction and Education of the Negro Slaves in the British West India Islands.’Footnote 21 This was reported in the 1818 Missionary Register, which also noted that Stainsby was to be paid the yearly stipend ‘allowed by the Society.’Footnote 22 His first appearance in the Society's payment books was in November 1818 when he was paid £50 for the ‘expense of his passage and in advance and in part of his salary.’Footnote 23 He was then paid £100 annually in quarterly instalments until 1823, when his annual salary increased to £115.Footnote 24 On Stainsby's arrival in Jamaica, a ‘resident’ clergyman, the Rev. John McCammon Trew, wrote to The Conversion Society that Stainsby ‘came too late for the curacy of this parish [St Thomas in the East],’ but assured the Society that Stainsby would still be able to ‘further the ends of conversion among the slaves’.Footnote 25 Crucially, from 1820, Stainsby also maintained a relationship with the Church Missionary Society (CMS), and eventually became secretary for its Jamaican auxiliary in 1829.Footnote 26 Stainsby's bilateral positioning within both The Conversion Society and the CMS was unique to him, with most missionaries retaining associations with either one or the other.Footnote 27 Stainsby ratified his affiliation with the CMS in 1824, when he wrote to its secretary, the Rev. Josiah Pratt, confirming his mission of the ‘diffusion of the Gospel truth in these parts of the world.’Footnote 28 Stainsby's employment by The Conversion Society and association with the CMS made him a central Anglican missionary in Jamaica.
Sunday Markets and Baptism
Stainsby's colonial mission in Jamaica began during a period of intense political turmoil in Britain. In 1823, Britain's foreign secretary, George Canning, introduced a number of resolutions that called for the amelioration of enslavement in the West Indies. Abolitionists such as William Wilberforce and Thomas Buxton hoped these measures could lead to the emancipation of enslaved people in the colonies.Footnote 29 However, Canning carefully refrained from suggesting that amelioration could lead to emancipation. By balancing the ‘well-being of the slaves themselves, with the safety of the colonies,’ he kept the West India Interest's support, and encouraged MPs to vote for these resolutions and support their implementation.Footnote 30 Canning's resolutions included measures to advance ‘civilisation’ amongst enslaved populations, such as abolishing the use of the whip for females, protecting enslaved peoples’ rights to own property, and removing certain restrictions on manumission.Footnote 31
Underlying the arguments for amelioration were calls for religious instruction amongst enslaved populations as a means of fostering ‘improvement’. As demonstrated by Dunkley and Strickland, the belief that religious instruction and conversion to Christianity were necessary to the implementation of amelioration policies meant that Anglican missionary societies became central to the cause of amelioration.Footnote 32 Dunkley, Glasson and Gerbner have demonstrated that missionaries relied on the support of resident planters in the Caribbean for physical access to their plantations in order to carry out religious instruction.Footnote 33 These studies have also suggested that enslavers supported Anglican missionaries financially as a way to ensure control over the type of religious instruction given, although analysis of this financial support has received less attention.Footnote 34 As such, Anglican missionaries had to navigate their relations with planters, even when this challenged the missionaries’ principles.
When sending missionaries to the Caribbean, both the CMS and The Conversion Society explicitly told their candidates not to embroil themselves in local political affairs. The Conversion Society's first pamphlet, issued in 1795 and entitled Instructions for Missionaries to the West-India Islands, specified that missionaries ‘must be careful to give no offence either to the Governor, to the Legislature to the Planters, the Clergy, or any other class of persons on the island … not interfering in the commercial or political affairs of the island.’Footnote 35 The CMS had similar guidelines and attitudes.Footnote 36 However, this led to internal difficulties for missionaries, and one such challenge came when Stainsby openly confronted the custom of Sunday markets.
Sunday markets were an integral part of the informal economy in Jamaica. At these markets, enslaved people sold surplus crops from their provision grounds, such as potatoes, ackee, yams, plantains, beans, peas, guavas and other dried roots.Footnote 37 By the late eighteenth century, Sunday markets in Kingston saw the participation of an estimated 10,000 enslaved people.Footnote 38 However, since these markets involved working on the Sabbath, Sunday markets became a site of contention. Glasson argues that, particularly in the early nineteenth century, new metropolitan campaigners and missionaries to the Caribbean failed to appreciate either the work schedule established on Caribbean plantations, or the fact that enslaved people wished to attend Sunday markets.Footnote 39 Missionaries from most denominations objected to markets, and John McAleer has argued that such objections were expected ‘from the average missionary,’ who would instead encourage enslaved people to attend church and school on Sundays.Footnote 40
The plantocracy of Jamaica proved resistant. They encouraged enslaved people either to carry out additional labour or to attend Sunday markets to sell goods from their provision grounds, and appreciated the problems that would entail from a ban of markets.Footnote 41 Alison Charles Carmichael, a Scotswoman resident in Jamaica, considered Sunday markets a ‘nuisance’, but also viewed them as a custom ‘which were it abolished other worse consequences might follow.’Footnote 42 Similarly, writing in 1825, the English geologist and enslaver Henry Thomas De La Beche observed:
No slave can be compelled to labour in Jamaica on Sunday, but to restrain them from doing so on their own account, would be considered by them as an act of great tyranny, and the practice cannot be prevented until they have received some religious impression of its impropriety.Footnote 43
This would eventually come to a head for Antiguans in March 1831. Following a ban placed on Sunday markets, enslaved people resisted: firstly, by ignoring the ban and secondly, by stirring revolt across two parishes.Footnote 44 Indeed, as Carmichael demonstrates, throughout the 1820s, the plantocracy recognized the need for Sunday markets, particularly if they were not willing to offer enslaved people another day off other than Sundays.Footnote 45 This became a tense issue between the plantocracy and missionaries.
John Stainsby's main concern was the importance of religious instruction on the Sabbath.Footnote 46 Consequently, as early as 1820, Stainsby wrote to Josiah Pratt, Secretary of the CMS, observing that Sunday markets must end if a ‘school for slaves [were to] succeed to any extent’.Footnote 47 Stainsby maintained that Sunday markets would be ‘the ruin of all efforts’.Footnote 48 Writing again in 1824, together with the Rev. John Matthew Trew, Stainsby pleaded the need to ‘abolish the bane of Colonial Improvement: Sunday markets.’Footnote 49 Such opinions resulted in severe criticism from the plantocracy, with a slander case against Stainsby forcing him to retract his beliefs and principles.
Indeed, in 1824, Stainsby was accused by one Captain Ferrier of being ‘in the habit of telling the [slaves] when [he] met them on Sundays going to market with provisions – that they should not go on that day, but that their masters should give them another day for this purpose.’Footnote 50 It was suggested that Stainsby had angered the planter in question. The allegation caused ‘great injury’ to Stainsby, and he made fervent attempts to deny it: writing two letters to the captain renouncing the claim, and visiting the estate to ‘explain the misunderstanding’. Stainsby reported back to The Conversion Society that the estate's overseer understood and believed Stainsby, calling it ‘nonsense’.Footnote 51 Whilst the veracity of the allegation is unknown, should it be true, it suggests that Stainsby possessed a wider understanding of the Sunday market system, and an appreciation for how integral that system was to the enslaved economy.Footnote 52 At the same time, Stainsby's palpable desperation to clear his name by retracting the strong views about Sunday markets he had expressed in his correspondence demonstrates the genuine importance that Anglican missionaries and their societies placed on good relations with planters.
A similar situation transpired in relation to baptism law in Jamaica.Footnote 53 The baptism of enslaved people had long been a contentious issue, and Dunkley has established that it was central to the Church of England's aims, particularly following the decision of the Jamaica House of Assembly to embark on a general pursuit of the ‘mass baptism’ of enslaved people from 1797.Footnote 54 Stainsby took issue with this approach, writing to The Conversion Society in 1823 of his grave concern that Jamaican law encouraged the baptism of all enslaved people regardless of ‘any course of religious instruction’.Footnote 55 Stainsby argued that an enslaved person would leave the church ‘in the same state of ignorance as when he entered it’.Footnote 56 Similarly, Stainsby critiqued the clergy's motivations for converting enslaved people, reporting to the CMS that he had noticed a lack of ‘pious clergymen’ since moving to the parish, and claimed that ‘“I am waiting for promotion to a benefice” [seemed] to be the general sentiment, and not “I am striving more than they all to convert souls.”’Footnote 57
Yet despite his criticisms, Stainsby continued to baptize large numbers of enslaved people. The following year, in 1824, he baptized 242 enslaved people, twice as many as any other Anglican curate working for The Conversion Society in Jamaica.Footnote 58 Stainsby's apparent hypocrisy in criticizing ‘inappropriate’ baptism on the one hand, and carrying these out on the other, was reflected more widely. The Rev. Richard Bickell, another clergyman stationed in Jamaica admitted:
I am almost ashamed to confess, that in Kingston, I myself baptised nearly 1000 in the space of six months, with little or no examination; for being only [a] curate, I considered that my refusal to admit them in their ignorant state would considerably lessen the rector's income, there being a fee of two shillings and six pence for every slave baptised.Footnote 59
As Bickell suggests, the reason for ‘mass baptism’ was to some extent financial.Footnote 60 Throughout the 1820s, rectors’ incomes were partly dependent on the number of baptisms they performed. In addition, Jamaican island law fined any clergyman five pounds if he refused to ‘baptize any Negro or other Slave that presents himself,’ regardless of ‘suitability’ for conversion.Footnote 61
Alongside financial motivations, campaigns for mass baptism were underpinned by the belief that enslaved people were unchristian, and thus uncivilized. In Civilising Subjects, Catherine Hall argued that racial hierarchies were central to the missionary enterprise more generally, due to the view that African people needed salvation.Footnote 62 Both the CMS and The Conversion Society in the 1820s were central in providing ‘evidence’ of an association between Christianity and civility, justifying the amelioration mission. Descriptions of ‘savagery’ were commonplace in both the Missionary Register and in the annual reports of The Conversion Society.Footnote 63 Thus, a combination of financial, practical and racist beliefs contextualized the motivations of John Stainsby as a missionary. Although Stainsby held strong beliefs on both Sunday markets and the practice of baptism in Jamaica, he suppressed these to appease planters, to ensure personal financial stability, and to contribute to the ‘successes’ of the mission. Stainsby was keen to attest to his own contribution to the mission: for instance, after his implication in the Sunday market rumour, he wrote to assure the CMS that he was a ‘simple member of the Gospel who has done much good.’Footnote 64
Missionary Reliance on Planters
The motivations of Stainsby and the missionary societies in appeasing the plantocracy were predominantly financial, but also practical, in that missionaries could only gain physical access to enslaved people on plantations with the planters’ goodwill.Footnote 65 Indeed, Strickland has demonstrated that enslavers held strict criteria on the missionaries they would allow access to plantations. William Marshall Harte, an Anglican clergyman in Barbados, was fined for preaching material that might ‘hinder the enslaver-enslaved power dynamic,’ by discussing topics that breached the social norms of the system of slavery.Footnote 66 Thus, missionaries could not have a viable religious mission to enslaved people without the consent of enslavers. This was exacerbated by Anglican missionaries’ financial reliance on planters. Following Canning's resolutions, the Standing Committee of the West India Planters and Merchants of the City of London resolved that ‘the extension of the means of Religious Instruction, is the best and surest foundation for the improvement of the civil as well as the moral condition of the Negroes in the West India Colonies.’Footnote 67 The committee praised The Conversion Society ‘for their exertions in engaging Clergymen of the Established Church, to cooperate with the Clergy of the Colonies in promoting the object of their Institution.’Footnote 68 Subsequently, the committee offered a contribution of £1,000 to the Society, accompanied by donations from associations in Liverpool and Glasgow of £100.Footnote 69 The Conversion Society sought to ‘secure an immediate application of the contributions’ – that is, use of this money – by increasing the number of its clergy.Footnote 70
The Conversion Society stressed its need for the support of the plantocracy. The 1823 report recognized that ‘where the right of the Master over the services of the Slave is absolute, it is next to impossible to attempt the work of conversion on the latter without the aid of the former.’Footnote 71 Moreover, the Society promoted itself at the Colonial Associations in London in order to collect subscriptions and donations.Footnote 72 This initiative was successful, and by 1824, the Society's governors included prominent planters such as Henry Goulburn, Henry William Martin Bart, George Hibbert and Charles Rose Ellis. Their support generated a sense of ‘satisfaction’ that the Society ‘had the support of the highest rank in both Church and state; as well as by several of the most considerable of the West India Proprietors.’Footnote 73
Moreover, an analysis of subscribers and donors to The Conversion Society in the 1824 annual report demonstrates that fundraising efforts in 1823 had targeted and successfully gained the support of those invested in slavery more widely. By cross-referencing annual subscribers and one-time donors to the Conversion Society with the Legacies of British Slavery Database, the strong involvement of these individuals in transatlantic enslavement is revealed. Half (108 out of 215) of all donors and subscribers had connections to transatlantic slavery. The majority of these were either merchants or enslavers (42/108 were West India merchants, and 84/108 were enslavers).Footnote 74 The Conversion Society thus saw a significant level of financial support from merchants, enslavers and those with other connections to transatlantic slavery. While donors could have faith that, as an Anglican society, it would not ‘corrupt the minds’ of enslaved people, the Society's reliance on donors’ financial aid also incentivized it against acting in opposition to enslavers’ interests, perpetuating its own form of a pro-slavery Christianity.Footnote 75
Support from the plantocracy became similarly central to the CMS in Jamaica. In an attempt to increase and monitor religious instruction in the Caribbean, George Canning's proposals had resulted in the establishing of two bishoprics in the Anglophone Caribbean in 1824.Footnote 76 Christopher Lipscombe was appointed to Jamaica; William Hart Coleridge to Barbados.Footnote 77 The bishops were expected to coordinate the work of clergy and missionaries across the Caribbean in policies of religious education and, ultimately, to supervise them.Footnote 78 However, their introduction, and their attempts to exercise control over the type of religious instruction given, caused conflict with missionaries employed by both The Conversion Society and the CMS.Footnote 79 Olwyn Blouet has argued that, generally, ‘Lipscombe was reluctant to promote slave education.’Footnote 80 This was because he was ‘primarily concerned with the status of the Church.’Footnote 81 Emphasis was placed on building churches, and in 1826 he consecrated the first new church built in Jamaica since his arrival.Footnote 82 By 1831, there were forty-six churches in Jamaica and seven chapels.Footnote 83 The focus on church-building, rather than providing religious instruction directly, meant that Lipscombe had a difficult relationship with missionaries. For example, from 1823, curates sent by the CMS were instructed to avoid any involvement in internal political matters due to Lipscombe's aim of keeping missionaries ‘in strict subordination to the established clergy’.Footnote 84 Lipscombe refused to license multiple CMS catechists, seeing them as a threat to his authority in the Caribbean.Footnote 85 Stainsby noticed this and reported that the CMS were ‘at present in bad odour with the Government here.’ This again was due to tensions between ‘the committee and the bishop.’Footnote 86
This conflict eventually resulted in the creation of an auxiliary committee of the CMS, known as the Jamaican Auxiliary for the Church Missionary Society (JCMS), of which Stainsby became secretary.Footnote 87 In a letter written in July 1828 to Dandeson Coates, Assistant Secretary of the CMS (1828–30), James Wildman, a wealthy enslaver, discussed the need for extra funds to support new catechists and assistants.Footnote 88 He wrote:
That it would be a most beneficial arrangement if a ‘Jamaica Fund’ were formed by the Society and by its several auxiliaries in Great Britain as it is highly probable that besides persons who support the Church Missionary Society, many West Indians and those who do not enter into the views of the Society would readily contribute to the amelioration of the spiritual slavery of the negro.Footnote 89
To encourage donations from British auxiliaries to the ‘Jamaica Fund’ for the provision of ministers, schoolmasters and catechists, the Rev. John McCammon Trew produced a pamphlet entitled ‘A Few Simple Facts for the Friends of the Negro.’Footnote 90 Printed in Bristol, it sought to convince the British public to donate to the Jamaican Auxiliary of CMS.Footnote 91 The pamphlet sought to tap into appeals for amelioration by highlighting the supposed ‘domestic tranquillity’ of enslaved people following the Society's implementation of religious education.Footnote 92 It endeavoured to show ‘the practical benefits likely to result both to the Master and to the Slave from the dissemination of Christianity among the latter.’Footnote 93 This openly identified the main target audience of the pamphlet as enslavers. In its final paragraphs the pamphlet asked:
Is it not a duty incumbent on every Christian, but more especially in every West Indian Proprietor, as well as on every individual who participates in the least degree in any temporal advantage resulting from the labour of the slave, to assist in bringing him into a state of salvation through the Gospel? Surely it is.Footnote 94
In both fundraising attempts, the JCMS exploited desires for amelioration by promoting to proprietors the perceived ‘practical and spiritual benefits’ of religious instruction.Footnote 95 By 1829, of the twenty-six leading members of the JCMS, twenty-one were enslavers, including the president, James Wildman, and the vice-presidents, the Rev. John McCammon Trew, William Stirling, William Stothert, Arthur Foulks, Archibald Sterling and James Miller.Footnote 96 John Stainsby was a secretary for the auxiliary alongside William Taylor and Richard Quarrell. Hence, by the late 1820s, both The Conversion Society and the JCMS relied on the financial support of the plantocracy, and also on their support in terms of access to allow them to carry out their missions. Accordingly, missionaries such as Stainsby became even more inclined to align themselves with the plantocracy's vision of a Christian slave-society.
Censored Missionary Material
Due to the missionary societies’ reliance on support from the West India Interest, material used in the instruction of enslaved people was heavily censored. It consisted of Scripture redacted by Anglican missionary societies to render it ‘suitable’ for enslaved people's consumption and acceptable to enslavers. Clergy, catechists and teachers could only read or teach from books which the bishop of Jamaica had approved.Footnote 97 Stainsby frequently wrote to both the CMS and The Conversion Society requesting such approved books,Footnote 98 which included ‘Child's First Books,’ sermons and spelling books.Footnote 99 In a letter to the CMS in 1829, Stainsby reported that the bishop of Jamaica had granted CMS catechists the authority to ‘read prayers according to the rubric of formal service,’ while clergy could only teach from books given approval by the bishop which were ‘authorized writings of the Church,’ including, for example, William Marshall Harte's lectures.Footnote 100 Indeed, in 1830, Stainsby recommended to the CMS that, to correspond with the bishop of Jamaica's wishes, Robert Dallas's instruction on an estate in Spanish Town should be ‘oral only’, due to the fears associated with a literate enslaved population.Footnote 101 Similarly, the CMS provided a prayer ‘to be used every morning on a plantation’ by enslaved people, which they stated had been ‘recommended by the Bishop.’Footnote 102 The prayer echoed sentiments of enslavers and overseers, including a criticism of ‘precious time misspent’ and a focus on an ‘all-seeing God’.Footnote 103 As articulated in this prayer, the motivations of Anglican missionary societies appeared synonymous with those of the planters.
The most provocative learning tool for the plantocracy, however, was the Bible. John Coffey has demonstrated planters’ fears regarding literacy and freedom, that if enslaved people could read the Bible then passages that did not support enslavement and which upheld total equality could be learnt and understood.Footnote 104 As early as 1807, The Conversion Society fostered a resolution to this problem by commissioning ‘The Slave Bible’, a version which was designed to be used exclusively by missionaries to teach enslaved people about Christianity and to encourage conversion. Under the guidance of Beilby Porteus, the Bible was edited down for ‘simplicity’ and Porteus gathered select portions of Scripture which ‘related to the duties of slaves towards their masters.’Footnote 105
The Slave Bible eradicated crucial passages. This included Galatians 3: 28–9: ‘There is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus’ [AV].Footnote 106 In this attempt to eliminate all verses that could potentially ‘result in rebellion,’ around ninety per cent of the Old Testament and fifty per cent of the New Testament was removed. Psalms from the Authorized Version of the Bible, which ‘expressed hopes for God's delivery from oppression,’ were absent. In the Old Testament, the Book of Exodus excluded the story of the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt, but did include the delivery of the Ten Commandments.Footnote 107 The Slave Bible promoted an ‘Exhortation to Obedience.’Footnote 108 According to Peter Cruchley, the Slave Bible represents The Conversion Society's attempt to ‘save without changing.’Footnote 109 The text certainly represents a remarkable example of the Church of England's overt manipulation of Scripture to appease planters. This, alongside the material permitted and recommended by the CMS and The Conversion Society, ensured that they were appropriate for enslavers’ model of religious instruction in the 1820s. By censoring material provided for use by enslaved people, and restricting literate instruction, missionaries bowed to planters’ fears of a literate enslaved population.Footnote 110
Stainsby as an Enslaver
It has been seen that Stainsby engaged in hypocrisy and dissimulation to appease the plantocracy and the Anglican missionary societies who employed him, and that he, to some extent, recognized his own insincerity. However, there was one aspect of Stainsby's life in which he would not have been considered insincere: his position as an enslaver. Anglican missionaries who owned enslaved people were not considered hypocritical by either residents or the church. Like at least thirty clergymen resident in the British Caribbean and another fifteen ‘transatlantic’ clergymen who spent time on both sides of the Atlantic, Stainsby was actively involved in buying and selling enslaved people.Footnote 111
Stainsby became the owner of the enslaved people registered to him through his second marriage to Catherine King in 1821, who, since at least 1817, had been the registered owner of Somerset Hall in St Dorothy, Jamaica.Footnote 112 Somerset Hall had functioned in the eighteenth century as a sugar and rum estate, but by 1821 the estate was split into three parts, and King (and subsequently Stainsby) probably held livestock and a small number of provisions. The other two sections of Somerset Hall were owned by Catherine King's brother, Joseph King.Footnote 113
An examination of colonial slave registers for Jamaica during this period makes evident both the shift in ownership from Catherine King to Stainsby, and Stainsby's later management of enslaved people. In the 1817 and 1820 registers, at least seventeen enslaved people were registered to Catherine King.Footnote 114 After her marriage to Stainsby in 1821, Stainsby became their listed owner. Between 1821 and 1823, two men, two women and two children were purchased by Stainsby, and one child, named Kitty, was born on the estate.Footnote 115 The purchased enslaved people included a family, Elizabeth (listed as Bess) with her two children, four-year-old Richard and two-year-old Bob. The same year, another family owned by Stainsby, forty-six-year-old Jenny and her four daughters, were sold to an estate in St Thomas in the East.Footnote 116 Hence, in the period immediately following Stainsby's acquiring ownership of the estate, he carried out multiple sales and purchases.
Between 1823 and 1829, another two children were born into slavery on Stainsby's estate. Stainsby sold Richard (Elizabeth's child, now aged ten) and purchased two men, William, a sixty-year-old ‘African’, and Charles, a twenty-year-old creole.Footnote 117 Subsequently, from 1829 to 1832, Stainsby purchased a twenty-four-year-old man named Paul Peterson, a thirteen-year-old boy named Richard, and a nine-year-old boy named John Thomas from an estate in Manchester.Footnote 118 It is likely that thirteen-year-old Richard was the same child whom Stainsby had sold three years prior. In this period, Stainsby also purchased three young women: Sarah, Fanny and Margaret; Sarah subsequently gave birth to a son, Joseph Thomas.Footnote 119 By 1832, twenty-five enslaved people were registered to Stainsby.
Between 1832 and emancipation in 1834, Stainsby purchased another eleven enslaved people, meaning that on 14 March 1836, he received £646 18s. 6d. in compensation for thirty-six enslaved people registered to the St Dorothy estate.Footnote 120 During this period, Stainsby also apprenticed men, women and children following 1834, including Jane Stainsby and Sophia Stainsby, both about thirteen-years-old, who were listed as Stainsby's apprentices in December 1837.Footnote 121 Due to the number of people he enslaved and the nature of the land, it is likely that Stainsby's enslaved people were ‘domestics’ who carried out domestic chores, such as laundry and cooking, and tended a small amount of livestock, which was relatively typical for members of the middling class such as Stainsby.Footnote 122
Since Stainsby did not write about his slave-ownership in letters or correspondence, we do not know how much influence his wife Catherine continued to have. It is necessary to look to other sources to consider how Anglican missionaries justified slave-ownership. The primary justification was the perceived differences between physical and spiritual freedom. At the formation of The Conversion Society's Bermuda branch meeting in 1829, Archdeacon Aubrey Spencer spoke of the compatibility of Christianity and slavery. Spencer stated that ‘of course’ he was against slavery, but that the evil was too difficult to eradicate, and thus mitigation of conditions through amelioration was sufficient.Footnote 123 Indeed, Spencer noted that even if he could eradicate slavery in a breath, he ‘would not’ because of enslaved people's ‘present state of mental degradation,’ which meant that ‘liberty would be to [an enslaved person], instead of a boon and a blessing, a burden and a curse.’Footnote 124 Religious instruction could free enslaved people spiritually, thus mitigating the need for physical emancipation.
Similarly, the CMS emphasized the importance of spiritual freedom over physical freedom. During the final years of colonial slavery, the Bath auxiliary of the CMS in Britain stated that ‘we trust that God designs that the deliverance of their bodies from the bonds of slavery shall be the fore runner of a deliverance which is far more important, the rescue of their souls from the bondage of sin and the service of Satan.’Footnote 125 Hence, Stainsby and other slave-owning Anglican missionaries would not have seen themselves as hypocrites. Firstly, because the enslavement of domestic workers was typical for the middling population in Jamaica. Secondly, they were confident that they were providing ‘spiritual freedom,’ which was, in their belief, superior to physical freedom.
Conclusion
Stainsby was employed by, and in correspondence with, the CMS until it withdrew from Jamaica in 1849, and he remained in Jamaica until his death in 1854.Footnote 126 In Hanover parish church, a plaque is dedicated to his memory. The memorial tablet was funded by subscriptions of the congregation who ‘treasured his memory and deplored his loss.’Footnote 127 Back in Britain, Stainsby's obituary in the Staffordshire Sentinel recorded that ‘finding Jamaica groaning under the terrible system of slavery, he took a decided part in mixing with the oppressed [slaves], whose souls it was his object to seek and save.’Footnote 128 Indeed, Stainsby's most important objective was to convert and instruct enslaved people under the guidance of the two missionary societies by which he was employed. As such, he carefully navigated plantation society in Jamaica to avoid antagonizing enslavers and stifling the mission's growth and success, and it is for his ‘soul saving’ that Stainsby is remembered on both sides of the Atlantic.
By consistently working to appease the plantocracy alongside the objectives of the CMS and The Conversion Society, Stainsby's actions can be defined by hypocrisy and suppression. He was required to use manipulated religious material designed to restrict notions of equality and freedom, with a view to diminishing the risk of uprisings and emancipation. This included the heavily edited Slave Bible, and texts specifically written to promote obedience and servitude. Similarly, he was expected to refrain from political opinion, even when this went against his own beliefs. He frequently baptized more enslaved people than any other cleric in Jamaica despite his reservations that enslaved people were not ‘ready’. Yet an element of Stainsby's life which evaded any need for his deception and avoided any claim of hypocrisy at the time was his slave-ownership. His position as an enslaver aligned completely, both with the middling population of Jamaica, and with the expectations of the Church of England, and as such, he was never questioned nor challenged on it. Stainsby was just one of many clergymen and missionaries who bought and sold enslaved people in Jamaica and across the Caribbean. Such analysis opens up further avenues for research and historical understanding: into an aspect of the Church of England's involvement in transatlantic enslavement that went far beyond religious instruction, extending to a form of pro-slavery Christianity that was carefully navigated by missionaries in the early nineteenth century.