Codrington went on to build up the largest land holdings in
Antigua, including his main plantation of
Betty's Hope, which he named after his daughter, and also secured a lease of the whole island of
Barbuda from
the Crown. He was appointed as captain-general of the
English Leeward Islands, and in 1683 moved his base of operations to Antigua, where he was an important plantation-owner and was influential in reforms to make the island more like Barbados. By 1685, he had founded the settlement of
Codrington on Barbuda and went on to build a stronghold there. During the
Nine Years' War of 1688 to 1697 he led a series of armed conflicts with the French. As a captain general, Codrington found many ways to line his own pockets and was the target of allegations of corruption when he died in 1698, not long after the
Peace of Ryswick.
King William III appointed this son to succeed him as captain-general and commander-in-chief of the Leeward Islands. ==See also==