Sir Thomas Modyford was appointed
Governor of Jamaica, by commission dated 15 February 1664 and made a
Baronet. He arrived in Jamaica 4 June 1664, with seven hundred planters and their slaves, marking the wholesale introduction of a slavery-based
plantation economy in Jamaica. The move was marked by tragedy for Modyford however, whose eldest son John was lost at sea when returning for his mother in
Barbados. But it was not long before Modyford took tight control of the Jamaican government by culling the council and filling it with his own supporters, including his brother, Col. Sir James Modyford, whom he made
Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica, Governor of the Town and Castle of
Port Royal and sole judge of the Admiralty and Customs. Thomas Modyford remained a factor for the Royal Adventurers until 1669, overseeing their plantation in Jamaica whilst Sir James was granted a royal licence in November to ship convicted felons from England to his brother in Jamaica. In Jamaica Sir Thomas used a labour force of twenty-eight
indentured servants from England, and a large number of African slaves. It was also under Thomas Modyford that the island was first divided into parishes. His own
cacao plantation at Sixteen Mile Walk was located in
St. Katherine's parish. However, these plantations came under regular attacks from
Jamaican Maroons. In the second half of the 1660s, Modyford waged war against the Karmahaly Maroons, led by
Juan de Serras, but the governor failed to subdue this community of runaway slaves. In 1670 he was "Governor of His Majesty's Island of Jamaica Commander-in-Chief of all His Majesties Forces within the said Island and in the Islands adjacent Vice-Admiral to His Royal Highness the
Duke of York in the American Seas", according to the commission to
Henry Morgan to make war upon the Spanish. The issuance of the aforementioned privateer commission to Morgan, who used it to
attack and plunder the Spanish possession of Panama, resulted in revocation of Modyford's governorship and arrest in 1671. King Charles II of England, in desperate need of Spain as an ally in an impending war with the Dutch, had ordered the arrest and revocation merely to appease a Spanish Crown, furious over the destruction of their prize city. Though charges were never preferred, and no trial was ever held, Modyford spent two years in the
Tower of London. He was released in 1674, and returned to Jamaica in 1675. == Death ==