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Joseph Foster Barham I

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Died
  
1789

Children
  
Joseph Foster Barham, Thomas Foster Barham

Grandchildren
  
Francis Foster Barham, John Foster Barham, Thomas Foster Barham, Charles Foster Barham

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Joseph Foster Barham, Thomas Foster Barham, Francis Foster Barham, Charles Foster Barham

Joseph Foster Barham I (1729–1789) was the English owner of the Mesopotamia plantation in Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica. Originally Joseph Foster, he took Barham as an additional surname (1750) for Henry Barham M.D., son of Henry Barham F.R.S.

Contents

Life

He was the son of Colonel John Foster (1681–1731) of Elim, Jamaica and Egham House, Surrey, and his wife Elizabeth Smith. After John Foster died in 1731, Elizabeth took two more husbands, John Ayscough, like Foster a Jamaica plantation owner, and after Ayscough's death around 1735, Dr. Henry Barham. Barham settled in England as stepfather to the Foster family of five sons and two daughters; he died in 1746. The eldest of the Fosters was Thomas who was Member of Parliament for Dorchester. The other sons were: John, William, Samuel, and Joseph. Of the two daughters, Margaret married Colin Campbell, and Sarah married William Mathew Burt.

Joseph Foster was educated at Eton College, and went on a Grand Tour. The change of his surname to Foster-Barham was a condition of his stepfather Henry Barham's will. It was carried out by Act of Parliament, around 1749. He visited the Mesopotamia estate in Jamaica, and returned to England in 1751. There his religious views were affected by the preaching of John Cennick. He also met Dorothy Vaughan, and they were married in 1754.

Foster Barham settled in Bedford, and was a Moravian from 1756 (as was his brother William, also living in Bedford). An evangelical Christian, his friends included John Newton from 1773, in his days as a curate at Olney.

After his first wife died, in 1781, Foster Barham moved away from the Moravians. He married again, in a Church of England ceremony in 1785; and moved to his new wife's home, Hardwick Hall in Shropshire.

Mesopotamia estate

The Mesopotamia plantation dated from the beginning of the 18th century. It passed by marriage from the Stephenson family to the younger Henry Barham; and then to Foster Barham. Ephraim Stephenson died in 1726; his widow Mary shortly married a Mr. Heith, who soon died, and she married Henry Barham in early 1728. She died in 1735.

Joseph Foster Barham I and his son of the same name ran a Moravian mission for the slaves, and required accurate record-keeping of the slave population. Extensive archives exist. The mission station existed from 1760 to 1835.

Family

Foster Barham married, first, Dorothy Vaughan, a Welsh heiress. They had three sons and three daughters:

  • Mary (died 1837 aged 79), who was a correspondent of John Newton, and married George Livius in 1783. Their daughter Maria married John Johnson, William Cowper's relative and editor.
  • Joseph Foster Barham (1759–1832)
  • John Foster Barham (1763–1789)
  • Thomas Foster Barham (1766–1844)
  • Elizabeth who married the Rev. Rose and was mother of Joseph Rose of Carshalton and Rothley.
  • Anna Joanna, who married Thomas Grinfield and was mother of Edward William Grinfield and Thomas Grinfield.
  • The sons were tutored by Aulay Macaulay. In a second marriage, Foster Barham wed Lady Mary Hill, the widow of Sir Rowland Hill, 1st Baronet.

    References

    Joseph Foster Barham I Wikipedia