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Rev Richard Austin

Birth
Saint Thomas, Barbados
Death
17 Jan 1851 (aged 80–81)
Saramacca, Suriname
Burial
Saint John, Barbados Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Rev. Richard AUSTIN (Thomas ) Chr?6 May 1770 in St Thomas', Barbados. d.17 Jan 1851 Pln Catharina Sophia, Saramacca, Surinam. Buried in Kleinhoop, Surinam.

Richard m1. Sarah STANTON on 25 May 1792 in St Thomas', Barbados.
Children:
M i Rev. Wiltshire Stanton AUSTIN
F ii Sarah AUSTIN b.8 Jun 1794. D. as an infant.

Richard m2. 19 Dec 1796 in St Michael's Cathedral, Bridgetown Mary Jane "Joanna" WENTWORTH d. 17 Aug 1806.
Children:
iii William Paul AUSTIN b.23 Dec 1797. Christened 16 Feb 1798 St Michael's, Barbados. William married Unk?
iv Mary Jane AUSTIN
v Rev. Charles Adye AUSTIN

Richard m3. ?Yvonne? POPPLEMAN d.bef 1823. Buried in Kleinhoop, Surinam.

Clergyman and slave-owner in Surinam. From a Barbados family, brother of William Austin and Thomas Austin (both British Guiana slave-owners) but by 1832 the owner of 250 enslaved people in Surinam. Father of Wiltshire Stanton Austin, Charles Adye Austin and William Paul Austin (each of whom q.v.). Reported to have died in Surinam in 1851.

The will of Richard Austin was made 14/04/1824 when he was 'about to make a voyage to Europe to arrange various family concerns.' He appointed his two beloved sons, William Paul Austin and Charles Adye Austin, and the husband of his daughter Mary Jane named Benjamin Fuller Tuckniss as his executors to take possession of his rights etc which are now claims on Plantations Kleinhoop, L'Assistance and a third estate which appears to be Appecappe, of which he was in possession not only by virtue of his marriage to Joanna Wentworth niece and co-heir of Paul Wentworth, but also by virtue of a contract between him as attorney to the guardians of the late Jane Elizabeth Smith now married to the Rev. Bruce of Belfast in Ireland. He left the estates to his three children, subject to a legacy of £1000 to the Rev. Wilshire Stanton Austin, his son by a former marriage and the transfer of specified enslaved people who had belonged to Sarah Stanton his first wife ('men - Sam. Walker Jos. Tom and a woman named Rose').
Rev. Richard AUSTIN (Thomas ) Chr?6 May 1770 in St Thomas', Barbados. d.17 Jan 1851 Pln Catharina Sophia, Saramacca, Surinam. Buried in Kleinhoop, Surinam.

Richard m1. Sarah STANTON on 25 May 1792 in St Thomas', Barbados.
Children:
M i Rev. Wiltshire Stanton AUSTIN
F ii Sarah AUSTIN b.8 Jun 1794. D. as an infant.

Richard m2. 19 Dec 1796 in St Michael's Cathedral, Bridgetown Mary Jane "Joanna" WENTWORTH d. 17 Aug 1806.
Children:
iii William Paul AUSTIN b.23 Dec 1797. Christened 16 Feb 1798 St Michael's, Barbados. William married Unk?
iv Mary Jane AUSTIN
v Rev. Charles Adye AUSTIN

Richard m3. ?Yvonne? POPPLEMAN d.bef 1823. Buried in Kleinhoop, Surinam.

Clergyman and slave-owner in Surinam. From a Barbados family, brother of William Austin and Thomas Austin (both British Guiana slave-owners) but by 1832 the owner of 250 enslaved people in Surinam. Father of Wiltshire Stanton Austin, Charles Adye Austin and William Paul Austin (each of whom q.v.). Reported to have died in Surinam in 1851.

The will of Richard Austin was made 14/04/1824 when he was 'about to make a voyage to Europe to arrange various family concerns.' He appointed his two beloved sons, William Paul Austin and Charles Adye Austin, and the husband of his daughter Mary Jane named Benjamin Fuller Tuckniss as his executors to take possession of his rights etc which are now claims on Plantations Kleinhoop, L'Assistance and a third estate which appears to be Appecappe, of which he was in possession not only by virtue of his marriage to Joanna Wentworth niece and co-heir of Paul Wentworth, but also by virtue of a contract between him as attorney to the guardians of the late Jane Elizabeth Smith now married to the Rev. Bruce of Belfast in Ireland. He left the estates to his three children, subject to a legacy of £1000 to the Rev. Wilshire Stanton Austin, his son by a former marriage and the transfer of specified enslaved people who had belonged to Sarah Stanton his first wife ('men - Sam. Walker Jos. Tom and a woman named Rose').


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