Hunting down the lost world of Georgian sugar

Old map of West Coast Demerara

This is the map on the wall of the manager's office, on the Wales Sugar Estate, Guyana. For me it's a treasure trove of old names.

I'd been looking for the estate described by a Georgian traveller, called Bolingbroke.

To understand what he'd seen, I needed to get to the Reynestein estate. Back in London, it had taken me days to find it, scouring old maps and books. I knew it was somewhere close to Zorg, up the Demerara River. Then I spotted it, an oblong of sugar, amongst a cluster of others. The map was just like this one, on the manager's wall.

I love the idea that the old Georgian names have survived, even today. To me, they sound like old bawdy houses or Dutch bars: ‘Free and Easy’, ‘Jacob’s Lust’, ‘Vive La Force’, ‘De Yonge Rachale’, and ‘Goed Verwagting’. In London, I'd also also discovered that they were now all lumped together into a super-estate called Wales, which is how I ended up here.

Of course, for me, it was slightly easier getting there, than it had been in in 1799. Bolingbroke had taken a tent-boat from Georgetown, rowed by some slaves. The journey had lasted two-and-a-half hours, and – throughout it – the oarsmen had sung a song called ‘Good Neger make good Massa’ ... Happily, it's only the names that have survived.

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