I only said that some of my Caribbean forebears were 'probably' slave owners.
I have found a possible one in the UCL database of compensated persons but, from my own family history research the connection is tenuous and is possibly a case of confusing two people with the same name. No compensation amount is given and if it is 'my' connection by 1834 he probably owned about 3 slaves. He was a 3x gt greandfather. Certainly, if the person in the UCL database was him nothing in the way of money came down to my branch of the family (of one of his daughters (my 2xgt gmother)
www.ucl.ac.uk/social-historical-sciences/history/research/research-projects-and-centres/centre-study-legacies-british-slavery-cslbs/cslbs-projects-and-partners/legacies-british-slave-ownership?utm_source=chatgpt.com
The wealth that they received is long gone.
Not necessarily. Many of those who received large sums in compensation used them to create more wealth and there are families which benefit from that wealth today.
I asked Chatgtp if it could identify currently wealthy families whose wealth originated in compensation payments
It came up with this
start
The Gladstone family — John Gladstone (father of Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone) was one of the largest individual recipients of compensation (he received a very large award for hundreds of enslaved people). The Gladstone descendants remain a well-known, landed and prominent family; in recent years members of the family have publicly acknowledged and apologised for those links.
The Cameron / ancestral network — UCL’s research showed that some ancestors of former Prime Minister David Cameron were paid compensation. David Cameron himself is wealthy and the family’s connection has been widely reported.
The Pinney family (Bristol / Nevis) — the Pinneys were plantation owners in the West Indies, received substantial compensation, and used that money to buy property and consolidate social standing (their Bristol house is now a museum). Their wealth in the 19th century was directly tied to plantation profits and compensation.
It also said this:
“Wealth established by compensation” is often mixed with earlier plantation profits, later investments, marriages and business activity — so for many families the compensation was one important element among several that built lasting wealth. Economic historians emphasise that the payments were concentrated (a small share of owners received a large share of the money) and those large payments were reused as capital.
End
You obviously think people are responsible for the actions of their ancestors over whom they had no control so what something more concrete would you and your family be prepared to give?
IF my family had benefitted from compensation payments, or the ownership of plantations using slaves, which it patently hasn't, I would feel very uncomfortable about the source of our wealth and would seek to use some of it in some way to benefit people of the island we were connected with.
As far as reparations is concerned, the UK, as a nation, benefitted from slavery. As I have said before, I am not sure that the former colonies were given much help at independence and it could be incumbent on us to do more.
I'm not arguing the toss any further with this.