There are many similar Free Villages in the Caribbean established through the work of
Nonconformist chapels. In Jamaica, these include: •
Buxton (named after the abolitionist Englishman
Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton) finance being raised through the process pioneered by Rev. John Clark's Baptist chapel, with the support of
Joseph Sturge. •
Clarksonville (named after the abolitionist Englishman
Thomas Clarkson); also arranged through the process pioneered by Rev. John Clark's Baptist chapel. •
Goodwill, on the border of
Saint James parish, arranged through Rev. George Blyth, a minister of the Scottish Missionary Society and funded by his congregation. Unusual, in being established subject to a raft of local rules and regulations devised by Blyth, or established with his approval. •
Granville (named after the abolitionist Englishman
Granville Sharp), in
Trelawny, arranged through
Rev. William Knibb's Baptist chapel. •
Kettering, (named after the birthplace of William Knibb). •
Maidstone, arranged through
Moravian missionaries where, to this day, some of the inhabitants still bear the family names of the original settlers. •
Sandy Bay, a little seaside village on the way from
Lucea to
Montego Bay. Founded as a Free Village for emancipated slaves, it was a mid-1830s initiative of the congregation of the Baptist pastor
Rev. Thomas Burchell, whose deacon was
Sam Sharpe, executed in 1832 after the Baptist War slave rebellion until he died for the cause of abolition and freedom. Today the Free Village's playing field is named 'Burchell Field' after the missionary. •
Sligoville, the first free village in Jamaica •
Sturgeville or
Sturge Town, eight miles from Brown's Town and named after the abolitionist Englishman,
Joseph Sturge; also arranged as above. •
Trysee (the name is believed to derive from 'try and see'), an early Free Village in the
Brown's Town area. In the Bahamas: •
Adelaide •
Carmichael •
Gambier, settled by Elijah Morris Although many of the Free Villages were named after a British man of widely accepted influence or importance, perhaps to help raise funds in England, the
Jamaican Baptists and Joseph Sturge were Moral Radicals and Nonconformists rather than in the political mainstream. One village was named after
Anne Knight, a female Quaker abolitionist. Pickering and Tyrell said that naming was "a brave initiative that honoured women in an active, albeit gendered role as reformers at a time when custom frowned on their participation in the public world". No Free Villages were named after the emerging African-Caribbean local leaders, although free Jamaicans became ordained as deacons in many of the Baptist chapels. They also conducted the schools and public services in chapels where there was no fully English-trained minister available. (For example, Henry Beckford served in this way at Staceyville before and after his visit to London in 1840). ==Conditions after abolition for freedmen estate workers==