Francis Barber

Portrait possibly of Francis Barber, attributed either to James Northcote or Sir Joshua Reynolds (see below), 1770s

Francis Barber (c.1742/3 – 13 January 1801),[1] born Quashey, was the Jamaican manservant of Samuel Johnson in London from 1752 until Johnson's death in 1784. Johnson made him his residual heir, with £70 (equivalent to £8,000 in 2016) a year to be given him by Trustees, expressing the wish that he move from London to Lichfield, Staffordshire, Johnson's native city. After Johnson's death, Barber did this, opening a draper's shop and marrying a local woman. Barber was also bequeathed Johnson's books and papers, and a gold watch. In later years he had acted as Johnson's assistant in revising his famous Dictionary of the English Language and other works. Barber was also an important source for Boswell concerning Johnson's life in the years before Boswell himself knew Johnson.[2]

Biography

Barber was born a slave in Jamaica on a sugarcane plantation belonging to the Bathurst family. His original name was Quashey, which is a common name for men of Coromantee origin.[3]

At the age of about 15, he was brought to England by his owner, Colonel Richard Bathhurst, whose son, also called Richard, was a close friend of Johnson. Barber was sent to school in Yorkshire. Johnson's wife Elizabeth died in 1752, plunging Johnson into a depression that Barber later vividly described to James Boswell. The Bathursts sent Barber to Johnson as a valet, arriving two weeks after her death. Although the legal validity of slavery in England was ambiguous at this time (with Somersett's Case of 1772 clarifying that it did not exist in England), when the elder Bathurst died two years later he gave Barber his freedom in his will, with a small legacy of £12 (equivalent to £2,000 in 2016). Johnson himself was an outspoken opponent of slavery, not just in England but in the American colonies as well.

Royal Navy

Barber then went to work for an apothecary in Cheapside but kept in touch with Johnson. He later signed up as a sailor for the Navy. He served as a "landman" aboard various ships, received regular pay and good reports, saw the coast of Britain from Leith to Torbay, and acquired a taste for tobacco. He was discharged "three days before George II died", in other words on 22 October 1760, and with a pipe between his teeth and a roll in his gait, he returned to London and to Johnson to be his servant.[2] Barber's brief maritime career is known from James Boswell's Life of Johnson:

Later Johnson put Barber, by then in his early thirties, in a school, presumably so that he could act as Johnson's assistant. From Boswell's Life:

Later years

Barber is often mentioned in James Boswell's Life of Johnson and other contemporary sources, and there are at least two versions of a portrait, one now in Dr. Johnson's House, which may be of him. Most recent art historians thought it was probably painted by James Northcote, or perhaps by Northcote's master Sir Joshua Reynolds, who was one of Barber's Trustees under the will. An alternative view, recently expressed on a BBC programme, is that it is by Reynolds himself, but of his own black servant, not Barber.

When making his will, Johnson asked Sir John Hawkins, later his first biographer, what provision he should make for Barber. Sir John said that a nobleman would give 50 pounds a year (equivalent to £6,000 in 2016). Then I shall be "noblissimus" replied Johnson, and give him 70 (equivalent to £8,000 in 2016). Hawkins disapproved, and after Johnson's death criticised his "ostentatious bounty [and] favour to negroes".[4] The bequest was indeed widely covered in the press. Johnson, in fact, left £750 (equivalent to £84,000 in 2016) in the trust of his friend Bennet Langton from which he was expected to pay an annuity.[5]

Barber moved with his family to a rented terrace house in Lichfield, Johnson’s birthplace, where – as a Gentleman's Magazine correspondent reported – he spent his time "in fishing, cultivating a few potatoes, and a little reading". Later he opened up a small village school in nearby Burntwood. The money from his inheritance did not last and Barber sold off his store of Johnson memorabilia to defray his debts.[2] He died in Stafford on 13 January 1801 due to an unsuccessful operation at Staffordshire Royal Infirmary.[6] He was survived by his son, Samuel Barber, his daughter, Ann, and his wife, Elizabeth.[7] His descendants still farm near Lichfield.

Francis Barber's marriage to Elizabeth Ball is featured in the short silent animation The Trouble with Francis (2000),[8] whilst Barber also appears as a character in the 2015 play Mr Foote's Other Leg.

See also

References and sources

References
  1. Sutherland, Kathryn (29 July 2015), "Enslaved to Samuel Johnson?", The Times Literary Supplement, retrieved 2 August 2015
  2. 1 2 3 Nicholl, Charles (16 July 2015). "Let us breakfast in splendour". The London Review of Books. 37 (14): 21–23. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  3. Bundock, Michael. The Fortunes of Francis Barber: The True Story of the Jamaican Slave Who Became Samuel Johnson's Heir, pp. 11-13 (Yale University Press, 2015).
  4. "Samuel Johnson's Last Years". From "The Life of Samuel Johnson", by Sir John Hawkins ("Postscript").
  5. Leslie Stephen, "Langton, Bennet (bap. 1736, d. 1801)", rev. Michael Bevan, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 accessed 15 July 2014.
  6. Gretchen, Gerzina (1995). Black London: Life Before Emancipation (pdf) (Dartmouth College Library ed.). Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2259-5. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  7. Cedric Barber, Slaves, Sinners and Saints: A Story of the Barber family over three centuries, Stoke-on-Trent: Tentmaker Publications, 2008.
  8. "The Trouble with Francis (2000)", IMDb.
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.