Radio Bimshire Presents
Wealth Built on Bondage (Part One) traces how the Drax family built and preserved generational wealth from sugar, slavery and land ownership in Barbados and Dorset, and asks what justice and reparations should look like today. When protests over racial injustice swept the world in 2020, Barbados was already wrestling with its own symbols of empire, including the statue of Admiral Horatio Nelson in Bridgetown. As that monument finally came down, another story of power and privilege was coming into focus: the quiet, centuries-long fortunes of the Drax family, built on sugar, enslavement and the brutal regime of chattel slavery at Drax Hall plantation in St George. In this episode of Sounds of Freedom III , host Shayla Murrell features British investigative journalist and author Dr Paul Lashmar who explored how one of Britain’s wealthiest families “got rich and stayed rich” from slavery, from 17th‑century Barbados to a 16,000‑acre estate in Dorset sometimes called “the Great Wall of Dorset”. Drawing on his book Drax of Drax Hall: How One British Family Got Rich and Stayed Rich from Sugar and Slavery, Lashmar unpacks documents that reveal the modern inheritance of Drax Hall by Conservative MP Richard Drax and the international debate over reparations now surrounding it. He explained more in a talk at the Barbados Museum and Historical Society. Wealth Built on Bondage (Part One) asks hard questions about inherited wealth, historical accountability and what it means to confront a past that still shapes who owns land and power today.
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