Harewood House was built in the 18th century by Edwin Lascelles, one of the wealthiest men in England. Edwin, as well as his father, and subsequent generations of his family, were Caribbean sugar merchants and actively exploited thousands of enslaved African people to make their business profitable.
Whilst their trade was abhorrent, both Henry and Edwin were shrewd businessmen, and in 1738, using enormous profits made from the Transatlantic trafficking in enslaved people, they purchased the combined estates of Harewood and Gawthorpe.
Here, learn about Harewood’s history and links to enslaved people, and explore the ways that we strive to use our platform for positive change.
Legacy of Enslaved People
Harewood and Slavery
Learn about Harewood House's origins in the Transatlantic trade in enslaved people, in this article by writer Mireille Harper.
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I've always found this remark by American writer James Baldwin inspiring: “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced." At Harewood, we face our history, in the hope of making a more just and equitable future."
David Lascelles, 8th Earl of Harewood
Engaging with the past for a fairer future
For many years, the Lascelles family and Harewood House Trust have sought to make Harewood a platform for change, through exhibitions and public events that open up conversations and bring communities together.
Acknowledge, Remember, Educate
David Harewood: What’s in a Name?
Arthur France: Son of a Small Island
Carnival Messiah
Sonia Boyce: Crop Over
Bertie Robinson: The Footman from St Vincent
Craft Spotlight: Chris Day
Acknowledgements
Acknowledge, Remember, Educate
David Harewood: What’s in a Name?
Arthur France: Son of a Small Island
Carnival Messiah
Sonia Boyce: Crop Over
Bertie Robinson: The Footman from St Vincent
Craft Spotlight: Chris Day
Acknowledgements
Voices of Leeds
We interviewed people from our local Black communities to hear about their experiences growing up in Leeds and their perceptions of Harewood.
Listen to the storiesEducating young people
As an educational charity, it is our responsibility to raise awareness of Harewood's past and the impact of that history today. Our on-site learning sessions and Study Spot give teachers the tools for engaging young people with these narratives.
Missing Portraits with St Matthew's Church of England Primary School
Missing Portraits with St Matthew's Church of England Primary School
Harewood House and the Transatlantic Trade in Enslaved People
Harewood House is a big, grand country house in Yorkshire, England. Today, Harewood is a museum, welcoming thousands of people every year.
Harewood House was built over 250 years ago, by the wealthy Lascelles family. The money they used to build the house came from the transatlantic slave trade, which was a huge part of society at the time, with many rich families and organisations like the Church and Royal family making money this way.
This was a terrible time in history, when millions of people were taken from their homes in Africa and forced to work on the other side of the world, in America, the Caribbean, and sometimes in Europe too.
Hundreds of years ago, European countries wanted to find ways to grow their empires. Europeans sailed across the world finding lands that were rich with minerals, plants and spices. These lands were already home to Indigenous people who had lived there for thousands of years. Many of them died after the Europeans arrived due to violence and disease.
Europeans looked for people who they could force to work for free, so they could make as much money as possible. Soon, Europeans looked to Africa for workers, buying people from African slave traders or kidnapping them from their homes, before forcing them onto ships and transporting them to the Caribbean and the Americas to work on plantations. Here, they grew luxury goods, such as cotton, sugar and tobacco.
Some people involved in this process became very rich. Like other powerful families, the Lascelles made their fortune by selling sugar and rum made by enslaved people and owning sugar plantations in Barbados, Jamaica, Grenada and Tobago. They also bought shares in the ships that transported enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean.
Henry Lascelles was the first in the family to be directly involved in the Transatlantic Slave Trade. He made enough money to buy the land that Harewood House stands on today.
When Henry died, his son Edwin took over Henry’s land and began building a huge country house. The beautiful architecture, furnishings and gardens that you can see today wouldn’t have been possible without the suffering of enslaved workers on his plantations in the Caribbean.
Enslaved people were forced to work on plantations in terrible conditions. They often worked very long hours in hot weather and were not allowed to rest. They did not have much food to eat and were forced to live in unclean places, and they weren’t allowed to leave. They also faced violence and mistreatment from their enslavers.
Enslaved people were resilient and found ways to resist the life that was forced on them. Some stole food, or refused to work. Others got together and fought back in a big way, fighting their enslavers, destroying buildings and setting fire to fields – this was called a rebellion. It was these acts of resistance that helped to bring an end to slavery for good.
Thanks to the bravery of the enslaved people, and the people who campaigned against slavery across Europe, slavery was abolished in the British colonies in 1833. The Lascelles family sold most of their plantations in the early 1800s. The last plantation was sold by another branch of the family in 1975. When slavery was abolished, plantation owners including the Lascelles were given money to cover the loss of their enslaved workforce, but the people that were freed received nothing to start their new lives.
Now we look at Harewood, and many other grand places in Britain, we can recognise that even though they are beautiful, they have a sad and difficult past. Today, Harewood House and the Lascelles family is honest about its history, working to make Harewood a place where people can remember the past and create a fairer future.
Learn more and contribute
Explore more resources about the history of the Transatlantic trade in enslaved people, its impact in the UK and around the world, and how you can help tackle racism and inequality.