Reproduced by kind permission of the East Sussex County Record Office ref: ESRO SAS/RF 20/7
Held at the East Sussex County Record Office as part of the Jamaica papers of Fuller family of Rosehill in Brightling, is a copy of a census of Spanish Town, otherwise known by its Spanish name of St Jago de la Vega; its reference is ESRO SAS/RF 20/7.
In July and August 1754 Charles White undertook the task of surveying the whole of St Jago de la Vega in order to create a census of all the white population and the free Negroes and Mulattoes. The only persons excluded were those gentlemen who were occasional residents during the sitting of the Assembly and the law courts. White attested that he had taken
Particular Account of the Houses and the Annual Rents or Estimate of Rents of the said Houses in and belonging to the said Town and Suburbs of St Jago de la Vega and of the Number of people of free Condition in each Family by going thro the different Streets Lanes Allies and Places thereof and by calling at or enquiring concerning each respective and Distinct Tenement and concerning the Number of People in each Family and that the annexed Account is the most exact he could with his utmost diligence procure of the Number of houses and the Rents of them and of the Number of persons of free Condition that were in the said Town att the time he took the said Account, exclusive of Gentlemen who appear by the said Account to have Houses therein and who come there occasionally to attend the Service of the Country as Members of the Council and Assembly and Judges of the Suprem(sic) Court of Judicature.
In total he recorded 866 white people and 405 free Negroes and Mulattoes. Slaves were of course not included. He also recorded the rental value of each property, the names of the owner and the occupier and the occupation of the latter. Additional notes give us information about the owners, for example that they were normally resident in Kingston or owned a plantation in some other parish than St Catherine.
You can find a spreadsheet transcription of the census here, but in the meantime here is a quick breakdown.
The occupations of the white residents are recorded as follows:
11 Attorneys, 5 Barristers and one councillor at law
2 Bakers, 2 Barbers, 2 Blacksmiths (one who was also a provision planter)
1 Bookbinder and 3 Bookkeepers
2 Bricklayers (one of whom was also a provision planter)
9 Carpenters, of whom one combined his work with being Coroner, farmer and provision planter
13 Clerks working in offices, for merchants or the courts and two of whom were also planters
1 Deputy Marshall, a Deputy Clerk of the Peace and a Dancing Master
2 Factors, a Fisherman and a Gardener
5 Gentlemen (one a planter and Justice of the Peace)
1 Housekeeper
20 Hucksters (who would have sold their wares on the street or from booths), one also a carpenter
2 Iron Mongers
1 Jew Butcher
8 keeping Lodgings
2 Mantua Makers
6 Merchants (one combining it with being a planter and farmer)
2 Midwives
2 Millwrights (one combining with being a provision and ginger planter)
1 Music Master and Organist (who had died between Charles White taking the census and writing it up)
John Venn the Parish priest who was also a planter
1 Penkeeper and a Peruke Maker
3 Physicians who were also planters; 4 physicians who were also surgeons (2 being provision planters); and 2 Surgeons
85 Planters, of whom one was Island Secretary, one a Member of the Assembly, one combined it with being butcher, one was clerk of the vestry and one a shopkeeper.
2 Provision Traders, a Retailer and a Riding Master
3 Sadlers
4 School Mistresses and 3 School Masters (one also a planter)
3 Seamstresses
3 Shoemakers, one a provision planter
23 shopkeepers, one resident in Kingston, one with a provision mountain and one a provision planter
1 reader to the Synagogue
3 Silver Smiths and a Surveyor
5 Tavernkeepers who variously combined it with being a silversmith, shoemaker, planter and pen keeper
4 Tailors (two of whom were also planters)
1 Upholder (i.e. upholsterer)
3 Watchmakers and a Wheelwright
11 households were made up of Orphans and there were 18 Widows
One man was Blind and 27 Properties were untenanted.
Three people in the survey of whites were recorded as being “free Mulattoes or Descendants from them admitted to the privileges of white people by Acts of the Legislature”. They were Mary Rose, her son Thomas Wynter, and Susan Hosier.
Of the free Negro and Mulatto inhabitants their occupations included:
4 Bricklayers
17 Carpenters (including 4 planters and one who was also a cooper), 1 cooper, 1 Sawyer,
1 Coachman, 1 Fisherman, 1 Hawker and 1 keeping Lodgings
2 Doctors, 1 Midwife, 1 Nurse (who was also a provision planter)
1 Cook and 3 Pastry cooks
1 Planter
4 Poulterers,
1 Mantua Maker, 29 Seamstresses and 9 Tailors
1 Schoolmistress, 1 Servant
4 Washers
2 Wheelwrights
4 Widows, 2 Orphans , and 19 persons for whom no occupation is recorded.
64 of the total proprietors in this group are women and 50 are men, but a few appear to be duplicates, with the same or a very similar name owning more than one property. This may reduce the total to 60 women and 45 men.