King William Clevland, of the Banana Islands

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King William Clevland, of the Banana Islands

Birthdate:
Death: December 06, 1758 (37-38)
Immediate Family:

Son of Capt. William Clevland and Anne Clevland
Husband of Kate Clevland and Ndamba Clevland
Father of King John Clevland, of the Banana Islands; Elizabeth Hardcastle and King James Clevland, of the Banana Islands
Brother of John Clevland, MP

Managed by: Woodman Mark Lowes Dickinson, OBE
Last Updated:

About King William Clevland, of the Banana Islands

William Clevland (1720 – 6 December 1758) was an Anglo-Scot who became the self-appointed King of the Banana Islands off the coast of present-day Sierra Leone.[1]

Contents [show] Early life and family[edit] William Clevland was the son of Commodore William Clevland, a Scotsman who settled at Tapeley Park, near Bideford, Devon. His brother was John Clevland, who was appointed as Secretary of the Admiralty.[2]

Career[edit] In the 1730s Clevland was working for the Royal African Society, which had a monopoly on trade at Sierra Leone. He was on board a slave ship that was wrecked off the Banana Islands. He and surviving African slaves made their way to the islands, which they settled. Clevland took power and named himself as king.[3]

He had three children: By Kate Corker, daughter of King Skinner Corker:

John Clevland (1740) Elizabeth Clevland Hardcastle (1741-1808) who settled in South Carolina.[4] By Ndamba, a Kissi woman. Their Eurafrican children included:

James Cleveland Both Elizabeth and James were sent to England for his education.

John succeeded his father as sovereign of the Banana Islands, and was in turn succeeded by James Cleveland.[5]

In this period, the British had a trading post at the mouth of the Sierra Leone River and by 1792 had established a colony of freedmen at Freetown.

References[edit] Jump up ^ Lang (1999) Jump up ^ Lang (1999) Jump up ^ Caulker-Burnett I. Jump up ^ "Elizabeth Clevland Hardcastle, 1741-1808 : a lady of color in the South Carolina low country". Family Search. Retrieved 27 October 2014. Jump up ^ Louise, E. (2001). Elizabeth Clevland Hardcatle, 1741-1808: A Lady of Colour in the South Carolina Low Country. Columbia, South Carolina: Phoenix Publishers.