![]() Sir John Gay Alleyne, the Alleyne School and a most impressive legacy that Mount Gay Rum DistilleryA Story by COLLYMORE![]() This is a tribute to my alma mater and all those, past and present, who are associated with it.![]() By
Stanley Collymore Thank you Mount Gay Rum for your commendable and
altruistic gesture in not only recognizing the remarkable achievements of the
Alleyne School and recognizing the outstanding philanthropy of the Sir John Gay
Alleyne, but also in praiseworthily giving something back not only to the
region where all of this started, but equally so Barbados itself. My followers and readers following this report of mine
here would have already known of the origin of Mount Gay Rum " first distilled
in 1703 and is the oldest continuously produced rum in the world in the country
of Barbados, where rum was initially invented, and moreover its close
association with Sir John Gay Alleyne, whose middle name, Gay, became closely
and indelibly associated with this specific brand of rum, that both rum
connoisseurs and the world at large widely recognize and delightedly appreciate
as Mount Gay Rum. But Mount Gay’s history is not only connected with rum
distillation, production and distribution. Sir John Gay Alleyne whose name
emblazons every bottle of this Barbadian nectar was a truly remarkable
Barbadian man of his time, whose legacy has left a lasting impact on multiple
generations of subsequent and fellow Barbadians. A white and local Barbadian born into a family of
considerable means, John Gay Alleyne was someone wholly distinct from most
whites of his time and generation. For a start, he was implacably opposed to
slavery and the ill-human and barbaric treatment of Blacks and was resolved
from an early age to do whatever he could not only to resist this white trend
but also eradicate it. A highly intelligent as well as a conscionable man John
Gay Alleyne became an elected and popular MP for the regional constituency of
St. Andrew where he was born and also lived. And so skilled and influential was
John Gay Alleyne in his parliamentary and other social issues campaigns that he
quickly rose through the ranks of his fellow parliamentary members to become
not only the youngest ever Speaker in the history of the statutorily
self-governing Barbados Parliament, established in 1639 and which in 2019 is
still ongoing, and is itself the second oldest continuous parliament in the
entire world after the House of Commons in London, England, but a position that
he honourably held for over 40 years; once again setting a remarkable record
that to this day in Barbados (2019) parliamentary history has not been
exceeded. A skilled businessman, John Gay Alleyne bought
plantations in his St. Andrew constituency as well as the north of Barbados
generally referred to then and still is as the Scotland District. By all
accounts and at a time of slavery when most whites were brutally exploiting
their slaves who legally were designated as nothing more than bought and paid
for human chattels " in other words expendable property " John Gay was most
impeccably different. And such was the commendable nature of this white
Barbadian that he even used his own money to purchase other plantations within
several other Caribbean islands, and as always treating his employees, whom he
irrefutably saw as human beings and not as expendable chattels, with the same
dignity and respect that he felt that all of God’s human creations were
inalienably entitled to. As a result, production on John Gay’s plantations were
always at an all-time high, a sure recognition by his Black employees of John
Gay’s altruism, compassion and humanity towards those who through no fault of
theirs had been enforcedly placed in the bondage of servitude by a graspingly
greedy, avaricious, grotesquely inhumane and endemically barbaric white society
to whom money, profit and general abuse in acquiring these were the only things
that actually mattered to them. Intent not only on improving the lifestyles of his
Black employees John Gay Alleyne, this phenomenally significant and outstanding
human being decided that as a legacy to the outstanding work and cooperation
that his workers had rendered on his behalf, he would set up a school that
would enable both enslaved Blacks and poor whites - who were principally Irish
and Scottish indentured servants transported to Barbados, or “Barbadozed” as
was the common terminology used at the time by the barbaric English that sent
them there, long before any European had ever heard of Australia, but which
after its colonization became the focal point for these white outcasts to be
sent to by the English, and why this specific area of Barbados was initially
called the Scotland District "to have an education, which could quite significantly
alter their personal lives as well as their immediate and long-term job
prospects. That inspirational educational project splendidly set
in motion by the now ennobled Sir John Gay Alleyne, who was knighted by King
George III of England " Barbados from its inception as an unchanged English
colony in 1627 and throughout its continuously unbroken existence as such until
its sovereign independence on the 30 November 1966, was a self-governing and
most particularly locally run, parliamentary territory, that completely
fortuitously for England (there was no entity such as Britain or any United
Kingdom then) became not only England’s richest colony but also rather
single-handedly totally financed the much heralded and English boasting English
Industrial Revolution - was the Alleyne
School, appropriately named after this great and noble white, Barbadian
citizen. Most unfortunately, however, Sir John Gay Alleyne did
not live to see his motivating project come into fruition. But, even so, he had
accordingly most carefully and diligently set out the detailed parameters of
what he specifically intended and, significantly, wanted to be carried out, so
that those who in his will were entrusted with this incomparable project of his,
knew precisely what this highly principled and extraordinary, white man
intended, wanted and was unquestionably dedicated to ensuring actually came
about. Accordingly, the Alleyne School: that subsequently and
undoubtedly became my proud alma mater and the most esteemed secondary
educational institution throughout my determinative and impressive education in
Barbados was established: a fully-fledged grammar school as Sir John Gay
Alleyne had wished it to be. And most pointedly located in his precious St.
Andrew District, where he was born, had lived all his life, was the duly
elected Member of Parliament for, was the distinguished Barbados House of
Parliament Speaker for in excess of 40 years, as well as the espoused and interminably
practising humanitarian and philanthropist that he had always been, Sir John
Gay Alleyne’s esteemed Alleyne School " and naturally my own too " was
established in 1785, in the elegantly
beautiful, admiringly picturesque, longstanding and companionably domesticated
and quite notably exceedingly enchanting valley of Belleplaine: so mesmerizingly
acknowledged and portrayed by some early French visitors to the area who were thoroughly
impressed by the overwhelmingly natural spectacle of untrammelled beauty which
agreeably gladdened their eyes, that they consequently referred to the area as “la
belle plaine” " a name that affectionately stuck, just as it became the particular
location where the Alleyne School was originally established, and to this very
day in 2019, 234 continuous years afterwards, still stands. Academic excellence, the highest moral standards, a
marked and discernibly unselfish sense of commitment to the island of Barbados,
as well as one’s own society and regional peoples were some of the plethora of
intrinsic values that were instinctively imbued within all those who were
fortunate to have attended the Alleyne School, and likewise comprised the many noble
values that all of us saw, recognized and earnestly endeavoured to carry out as
worthy pursuits not only during our school life at the Alleyne School but
equally as well, when we inevitably entered the wider world. And it’s a glowing
measure of his importance as a man and a commendable human being dexterously
coupled with his remarkably outstanding and lasting legacy that his influence
both carried and merited, that Sir John Gay Alleyne will not only for those who
entered, studied and benefited from being at the Alleyne School, but also
everyone who is fully cognizant of what Sir John Gay Alleyne has done then and
subsequent generations of Barbadians and others both recognize and are
eternally grateful for that there will always be a bond of the deepest
gratitude to this remarkable and highly moral man. We all also know of Sir John’s close and caring
involvement with Mount Gay Rum Distillery and the prodigious influence and
immense impression that he also wielded there, and it’s with profound appreciation
that the likes of me, an exceedingly proud and thankful beneficiary of Sir John
Gay Alleyne’s legacy and altruistic beneficence, say a heartfelt thank you to
Mount Gay Rum for splendidly maintaining the impressive and outstanding legacy
of Sir John Gay Alleyne. Thank you! Finally, from its inception the Latin motto of the
Alleyne School was and still is: “Aliis Non Sibi.” Translated into your
language that means: “For others, not ourselves.” Which is a most apt way to
characterize all that Sir John Gay Alleyne, the Alleyne School and those that
with pride can honourably say that this remarkable school was or still is their
alma mater. God Bless the man Sir John Gay Alleyne and his legacy
the Alleyne School; God Bless all those who attended and still do, the Alleyne
School; God Bless Mount Gay Distillery, and God Bless our native homeland,
Barbados. © 2019 COLLYMORE |
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Added on July 6, 2019 Last Updated on July 6, 2019 Tags: Alleyne School, Barbados, Mount Gay Rum, Sir John Gay Alleyne Author![]() COLLYMORECambridge, Cambridgeshire, United KingdomAboutAcademic, Journalist, Writer. I'm a highly intelligent, articulate and well-educated human being with an intuitive but enterprising sense of responsibility and a strong moral compass that instincti.. more..Writing
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