Sources on property and ownership in the Danish West Indies
Sources on property and ownership in the Danish West Indies
Sources on property relations in the Virgin Islands under colonial Danish rule include sources on estate and places, but also documentation on slave ownership.
Sources and registry
Below are selected source groups that are relevant to exploring property relations. Use the glossary with explanations of the most important archival terms and concepts: Danish-English translations of archival terms.
However, sources on ownership and property relations can be found in many other sources. In the registry, you can get an overview of all digitized records from local Danish authorities in the Danish West Indies:
Property relations and ownership
In the Danish West Indies, most land and valuable assets were owned by a small upper class, primarily plantation owners and merchants.
The rest of the population owned very little, and the enslaved labourers even less. The biggest difference from Danish conditions was that during the slavery era, one could also own people and bequeath them to heirs or take out loans against their value, just like other property.
Property in land, houses and enslaved labourers was registered for tax purposes in tax records and land registers. That way you can follow the successive owners of a particular property. It was recorded in mortgage books and records if an owner took out loans in his or her property, whether it was a plantation, a ship or an enslaved labourer. Thus you can get an insight into not only the land (with plantations and houses) a person owned, but also other types of property.
Finally, information about the property and possessions of deceased individuals was registered in the probate documents, where you often get an even more detailed insight into personal belongings, such as teaspoons, shirts and books.
Genealogy with Sources on Property Relations
An example of how property sources can be used for genealogy is seen in the story of the free coloured businesswoman Maria Elizabeth Yard (c. 1789-1851).
From the land register (matrikel) of St. Croix 1805-1806, it is noted that Maria lived at Fiskergade 1 & 2 in Christiansted and owned 5 slaves. And in the mortgage register (panteprotokol) of Christiansted for the years 1838-1841, it is shown that in 1839 Maria inherited properties No. 1, 2, and 3 in Fiskergade, as well as a substantial annual pension of 1100 rigsdaler.
Find more tips for person searches in the guide How to Find a Person from the Danish West Indies.
Property Relations
Land Lists and Registers
Property in land, houses, and slaves was registered for tax purposes, allowing the tracking of a property’s ownership chain.
Probates
Information on deceased persons’ properties, belongings, and heirs is registered in probate cases.
Mortgage Books
If an owner took out a loan on their property, it was recorded as a mortgage, whether it was a plantation, a ship, or a slave.
Land lists and registers, 1688-1915
Land Lists and Cadastres (so called after 1755) were annual tax returns from property owners on the islands for calculating personal and land tax. In the collections, the Cadastres (Matrikler) are referred to as Land Registers, which will be the term used throughout the rest of the guide.
Land Lists and Registers can help you investigate property relations for urban or rural properties in a given year. They also indicate the number of people living on the property: men, women, children, employees, and slaves.
Free persons are often listed by name, possibly with other personal information. Slave names are not listed (these can be found in land register information forms/slave lists). For plantations, location, size, and type of crops and production are also indicated.
Land Lists and Registers
Where
Know the property’s location, including which island and which district or town.
When
Know the period you want to find property information from.
Who
Knowing the owner’s name helps your search.
Use Land Lists and Land Registers
Land Lists and Land Registers are archived separately. Both are organized geographically by island and then chronologically. The following years are preserved:
Land Lists
- St. Thomas: 1688-1694, 1697-1749, 1751-1752, 1754.
- St. John: 1728-1739.
- St. Croix: 1742-1754.
Land Registers
- St. Thomas: 1755-1915.
- St. John: 1755-1915.
- St. Croix: 1758-1775, 1780-1783, 1786-1806, 1814-1915.
Within each year, the Land Lists and Land Registers are divided geographically by districts (rural areas) and towns. The order within each geographic area varies, e.g., from east to west or west to east, but the order is usually consistent over long periods.
From around 1718, Land Lists have an alphabetical index organized by the owner’s first name; in Land Registers, it is by the owner’s last name. From around 1800, plantations in each district are listed under the owner’s name. Additionally, the plantation’s name appears with the owner’s name. Note that some plantations change names, new ones are created, and some disappear due to mergers and subdivisions.
Land Lists are written in Dutch (Latin script) or Danish (Gothic script), while Land Registers are in Danish (Gothic script).
See Land Lists and Registers on Arkivalieronline
The Land Lists and Land Registers are archived under two different authorities.
The West India and Guinea Company, The Bookkeeper
Audited Accounts, West Indian Accounts
Probates, 1671-1903
Probates were the legal documents prepared when a free person on the islands died. In the probates, you will find information about the deceased’s property and heirs.
The property information can be very detailed, covering everything from entire plantations with slaves and buildings to pots and pans.
Probates
Who
Know the name of the person whose property you want to investigate.
When
Know the period in which the person whose property you want to investigate died.
Where
Know where the person died, i.e., on which island or in which town.
Use Probate Documents
The West Indian probates are not easy to work with. They consist of different types of probate documents written at different times during the handling of a probate case, and they change over time.
Probate documents from before 1755 are archived under the West Indian-Guinea Company. Probate documents from after 1755 are generally archived under the magistrate, who handled law enforcement in a specific geographic area (St. Thomas and St. Croix: town magistrates, St. John: rural magistrate).
Additionally, some special probate cases are archived under the West Indian Government. The two time periods – before and after 1755 – sometimes overlap, so the division is not entirely consistent. Therefore, it is advisable to consult both groups to find the desired probates.
Probates before 1755
Probate documents before 1755 are not divided by type of probate document, but only by whether the deceased was an employee of the company or a citizen and then chronologically.
Go to Probates before 1755 on Arkivalieronline
The West India and Guinea Company, Board of Directors
- Letters and documents concerning inheritance and settlement of estates left by persons who had died in the West Indies 1671-1754
- Administration of the decedent estates of Company functionaries at St. Thomas and St. John 1705-1754
- Regarding Governor Jørgen Iversen’s estate 1679-1684
- Governor Michel Crone and his half-brother Knud Helmer’s decedent estates 1713-1737
- Administration of decedent estates of Company functionaries at Croix 1734-1751
- Administration of decedent estates of inhabitants of Thomas 1689- 1701
- Letters of administration and other documents concerning deceased inhabitants of St. Thomas 1726-1751
- Letter of administration in the estate of planter Willem Vessup at Thomas 1732-1740
- Notices concerning the administration of West Indian decedent estates 1733-1739, 1736-1740
Probates after 1755
Probate documents after 1755 are divided into three main groups of probate documents in prioritized order and a fourth group, which can also be useful. These four groups are first divided geographically by island and then chronologically.
1. Registration and appraisal protocols
These protocols record the start of a probate case, i.e., the death and the values in the deceased’s estate. Besides the chronological order of the cases, some protocols have an alphabetical index by the deceased’s name. Each probate case was assigned a number that recurs in the types of documents described below.
2. Probate court session protocols
These protocols record the individual court sessions during the probate process in chronological order. The court sessions dealt with the payment of debts in the estate and the collection of receivables.
3. Probate decree protocols
The probate decree was the final document in the probate process. It documents the estate’s inventory and distribution among the heirs.
4. Individual probate cases
This group contains documents submitted or used during the probate case process, e.g., bills, loan certificates, and deeds. Unlike the three protocols above, individual probate cases are organized into four subgroups, with subgroups I, III, and IV alphabetically arranged by the deceased’s last name. Subgroup II is not organized.
Go to Probates after 1755 on Arkivalieronline
Sheriff of St. Thomas
- Registers of inventories and appraisals 1736-1891
- Probate Court records of proceedings 1736-1893
- Files relating to the Probate Court records of proceedings 1815-1893
- Registers of probate letters concerning inhabitants 1717-1766
- Registers of probate letters concerning planters 1724-1763
- Registers of probate letters concerning civil servants and inhabitants 1800-1814
St. Thomas and St. John Government
- Registers of inventories and appraisals 1763-1882
- Registers of inventories, appraisals, proceedings, wills, 1807- 1836
- Probate Court records of proceedings 1758-1799
- Probate Court records of wills and proceedings 1836-1859
- Records of the Probate Court 1741-1823
- Probate files 1778-1859
- Probate letters 1783-1806
The West Indian government
Sheriff of Christiansted
Registers of inventories and appraisals
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- Registers of inventories and valuations concerning burghers and planters 1747-1799
- Registers of inventories and valuations concerning civil servants 1755-1800
- Registers of probate letters concerning non-commissioned officers, private soldiers, servants, unemployed persons, and free blacks 1782-1798
- Registers of inventories and valuations concerning all ranks and classes 1800-1878
Probate Court records of proceedings
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- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning burghers and planters 1747-1883
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning civil servants 1759-1863
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning non- commissioned officers, private soldiers, servants, unemployed persons, and free blacks 1781-1833
Registers of probate letters
- Registers of probate letters concerning burghers and planters 1736-1790.
- Registers of probate letters concerning civil servants 1734- 1792.
- Registers of probate letters concerning non-commissioned officers, private soldiers, servants, unemployed persons, and free blacks 1786-1792
Probate cases
Sheriff of Frederiksted
Registers of inventories
Probate Court records of proceedings
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- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning burghers and planters 1760-1793
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning civil servants 1781-1801
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning non- commissioned officers, private soldiers, servants, and unemployed persons 1781-1801
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning the estate of manager Thomas Clarke
- Probate Court records of proceedings concerning all ranks and classes 1844-1881
Registers of probates
Mortgage Books, 1736-1907
In the mortgage books, you will find information about the mortgaging of property on the islands. They provide insight into what a person owned during their lifetime. The mortgaged property could range from entire plantations and ships to individual slaves. Slaves were considered property and could thus be mortgaged.
Mortgage Books
Who
Know the name of the mortgaged property (plantation) or the person whose property you want to investigate.
When
Know the years you are interested in.
Where
Know where the property was located, i.e., on which island or in which town.
Use Mortgage Books
There are two types of mortgage documents, both organized chronologically:
- Mortgage Protocols
- Deed Books
For some of them, alphabetical registers organized by personal name and/or place name have been preserved.
The mortgage documents in the Danish National Archives are not complete. Part of the material is in the US National Archives in Washington DC and the Recorder of Deeds Office in the US Virgin Islands. Additionally, much of the material from Frederiksted burned during the labour revolt in 1878.
The material in the Danish National Archives is archived under two different authorities. For St. Croix, mortgage protocols are found under the Christiansted town magistrate. For St. Thomas and St. John, deed books are under the High Court for the West Indian Islands.
Go to Mortgage Books on Arkivalieronline
The West India and Guinea Company, Sheriff of Thomas
Sheriff of Christiansted
West Indian Superior Court 1805-1907
More guides on the Danish West Indies
The Danish West Indies
See all our guides and other tools for using the collections in the National Archives related to colonial times in the Virgin Islands.
Find a person in the Danish West Indies
When you’re looking for a person from the Danish West Indies – now the US Virgin Islands – you need different types of records, depending on which populations group the person belonged to.
Sources on colonial rule in the Danish West Indies
The Danish colonial authority intervened in many aspects of life in the Virgin Islands – in the courts, the barracks, the hospitals, and the schools.