The book is an attempt to show that,
contrary to general belief, free villages were established in Barbados soon
after the end of the Apprenticeship in 1838. The term "free villages" is employed in the way that it was coined by
its author, William Knibb, Baptist missionary in Jamaica. He said in November
1838 that such villages were to be the blacks' routes of escape from their
"inveterate enemies"; the emancipated black man could use the village as an "asylum" from which he
could "defy them with scorn, and go to any estate he pleases to work".
Therefore, the fact that as many as 69 such settlements could be found within
thirty years in small, densely populated Barbados suggests that the scenario
which was being played out in less densely populated territories was not absent
from Barbados. Indeed, there is evidence to suggest that every opportunity was
being exploited by blacks to acquire land that they could control and therefore
escape the restrictions of conditional tenancy on planters' lands.