Charles Vanderbourg’s Report to Ernst Schimmelmann

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Charles Vanderbourg (1769–1827) traveled to the Danish West Indies in 1796 at the behest of Ernst Schimmelmann (1747–1831) with instructions to make observations about conditions among the enslaved laborers on his family’s West Indian estates and then offer suggestions for improvements. He was a French aristocrat in flight from the reign of terror in his native land. After 21 months in the Danish islands, he returned to Europe and presented his Report to Schimmelmann in 1798. That document represents one of the earliest attempts at ameliorative reform. It covers broad areas such as of the work of the enslaved, their punishments, and matters concerned with health, shelter, food, clothing, and the like. This book builds on those basics, offering a short sketch of Vanderbourg the man, his time in the Danish West Indies, some of his correspondence, a short bibliography, a glossary of terms, and an index. By Arnold Highfield

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Charles Vanderbourg (1769–1827) traveled to the Danish West Indies in 1796 at the behest of Ernst Schimmelmann (1747–1831) with instructions to make observations about conditions among the enslaved laborers on his family’s West Indian estates and then offer suggestions for improvements. He was a French aristocrat in flight from the reign of terror in his native land. After 21 months in the Danish islands, he returned to Europe and presented his Report to Schimmelmann in 1798. That document represents one of the earliest attempts at ameliorative reform. It covers broad areas such as of the work of the enslaved, their punishments, and matters concerned with health, shelter, food, clothing, and the like. This book builds on those basics, offering a short sketch of Vanderbourg the man, his time in the Danish West Indies, some of his correspondence, a short bibliography, a glossary of terms, and an index. By Arnold Highfield

Charles Vanderbourg (1769–1827) traveled to the Danish West Indies in 1796 at the behest of Ernst Schimmelmann (1747–1831) with instructions to make observations about conditions among the enslaved laborers on his family’s West Indian estates and then offer suggestions for improvements. He was a French aristocrat in flight from the reign of terror in his native land. After 21 months in the Danish islands, he returned to Europe and presented his Report to Schimmelmann in 1798. That document represents one of the earliest attempts at ameliorative reform. It covers broad areas such as of the work of the enslaved, their punishments, and matters concerned with health, shelter, food, clothing, and the like. This book builds on those basics, offering a short sketch of Vanderbourg the man, his time in the Danish West Indies, some of his correspondence, a short bibliography, a glossary of terms, and an index. By Arnold Highfield