SurCourant 1839 12 december; Scheepstijdingen; Den 9den dezer, het schip Agenoria, kapt. W van der Korff, vanRotterdam, hebbende 50 dagen reis: Passagiers: de Heer B. Mac Donald met deszelfs Echtgenoote Barbara Mac Donald en B.A. Bleck.
Sur.Cour.1841-5-16; Paramaribo: Gouvernements Secretarij. Paramaribo , den 12 Mei 1841 (19909) Op Heden is aanteekening gedaan van het voorgenomen vertrek uit deze Colonie, van den volgende personen, als: David Alberga, Barbara Mac Donald, ... De gouvernements Secretaris G.S.de Veer.
Zij is getrouwd met John (Tackman) MacDonald of Achscarlet.
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
From: Scottis Slave-owners in Suriname, 1651-1863 - David Alston.
The Macdonald brothers, Alexander (1800–70) and Gordon (1804–59), were among the last Scots to move to Suriname, buy plantations and own slaves.
Both were born in the parish of Halkirk, Caithness, (Inverness, Scotland, UK) where their father John Macdonald (1752–1840) was a substantial farmer and cattle drover.
On his death they went with their mother, Barbara Gordon, to Pictou, Nova Scotia, where two of her brothers were already settled, and from there moved to Suriname. They probably used the connections made by another of Barbara’s brothers, Gilbert, and Gilbert’s son, John Sutherland Gordon, who had established themselves in Berbice and Demerara.
In 1853 Alexander bought Bellevue and Gordon bought Moy, both on the Coronie coast, from the heirs of Alexander Ferrier.
Gordon died in Scotland in 1859. Alexander received compensation for slaves on plantations John and Bellevue in 1863, and died in Suriname in 1870.[61]
[62]. Inverness Courier, 12 November 1909, report of Court of Session case arising from the will of Gordon Macdonald; manumission record available online from Nederlands Nationall Archief, but surname wrongly transcribed as ‘Namilton’; census returns.
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