George Frederic, by virtue of the long time he spent in Jamaica and his absence from the so-called court (more a council of sometimes rival chieftains), found it difficult to establish his authority upon his return. His two most powerful subordinates, with their own self-chosen titles, had used the regency to build local power bases. "General" Robinson, who ruled the Black River region, had not signed the act accepting George Frederic as king. "Governor" Clementi, who ruled the territory just south of the royal court was also very powerful and refused to participate in many acts of government. Thanks to George Frederic's alleged rape of one of the wives of "Admiral"
Earnee, there was tension between the king and him as well. George Frederic made a number of grants to various foreign groups; one of the most notable was the grant of a huge tract he made to
Gregor MacGregor in 1820, an area called
Poyais, which encompassed lands once granted by
King George I to a group of settlers. MacGregor then created a fraudulent scheme to bring European settlers there; when the settlers arrived, the king revoked the grant and required them to pay allegiance directly to him. He agreed to allow the Black Caribs, or
Garifuna, who were dissatisfied with their lives among the Spanish at
Trujillo, to settle in his lands. He died on 9 March 1824, either strangled by his wife and his body thrown into the sea, or assassinated by a "Captain Peter Le Shaw". ==References==