'Redlegs' was a term used to refer to the class of poor
whites that lived on colonial
Barbados, St. Vincent, Grenada and a few other Caribbean islands. In
Jamaica they are known as "walking buckras". Many of these people were
English,
Irish, or
Scottish, and had originally arrived on Barbados as
slaves,
indentured servants, or as
transported prisoners, notably from
Oliver Cromwell's wars in
Ireland and
Scotland and from the
Monmouth Rebellion. Small groups of
Germans and
Portuguese were also imported as plantation labourers. Many were described as "white slaves". The name is derived from the effects of the
tropical sun on their fair-skinned legs.
Because little existed on Barbados outside of the
sugar plantation, and African
slaves were trained in all needed trades, there was no demand for paid white labour. The Redlegs, in turn, were unwilling to work alongside the
freed slave population on the plantations. Therefore, most of the white population that chose to stay eked out, at best, a subsistence living. Because of the deplorable conditions under which the Redlegs lived, a campaign was initiated in the mid-
19th century to relocate portions of the population to other islands which would be more economically hospitable. The relocation process succeeded, and a distinct community of Redleg descendants live in the Dorsetshire Hill district on
Saint Vincent as well as on the islands of
Grenada and
Bequia.
References in Popular Culture
The song "Tobacco Island" by the
Celtic Punk band
Flogging Molly is told from the point of view of Irish Redlegs captured by Oliver Cromwell.
Australian Rules Football club
Norwood are nicknamed The Redlegs
External link
★
1957 article on Redlegs
★
The Sunday Times - "Poor Scots who became white trash"
★
Tangled Roots - "'Barbadosed' - Africans and Irish in Barbados"
★
The Multiracial Activist - "Barbados and the Melungeons of Appalachia"