A. C. Shillingford

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Born11 May 1882
Died7 March 1938 (aged 56)
OccupationBusinessman
FatherAlbert Charles Shillingford
Albert Cavendish Shillingford
Born11 May 1882
Died7 March 1938 (aged 56)
OccupationBusinessman
FatherAlbert Charles Shillingford
Relatives

Albert Cavendish Shillingford (11 May 1882 — 7 March 1938), also known as "ACS", was a West Indian businessman of colonial Dominica.[1][2]

Albert Cavendish Shillingford was born on 11 May 1882 in Saint Joseph, Dominica, to Albert Charles Shillingford and Anne Marie Pinard. His father Charles was a respected planter and Justice of the peace who owned the 198 acre[3] Snug Corner Estate in Saint George Parish, where he lived.[4] His Shillingford ancestors, originally from England, settled in Dominica in the late 18th century. Shillingford's mother, also known as Aglais, was from Saint Joseph and is described as having a genial disposition, she died in 1898.[5] His father then married Ella Serrant and had another 6 children with her.[4] He attended the Dominica Grammar School in Roseau, which he later served as a trustee.[6]

Career

Early career

After receiving his druggist license upon completing training at the Roseau Hospital, Shillingford partnered with fellow student Sidney Green to establish Shillingford & Green, Druggists in 1905. After five years, the partnership was dissolved, leading to the creation of their respective businesses, Shillingford's being a pharmacy and grocery named The Phoenix.[7][1][8]

Import and retail

Shillingford later expanded his business ventures, drawing inspiration from his uncle, Thomas Howard Shillingford, who had successfully opened shops in villages along the west coast.[9][10] He implemented a similar strategy in Roseau, the capital, founding A. C. Shillingford & Co. Over time, the company grew into a diversified enterprise encompassing the pharmacy, a grocery store, 3 dry goods stores, an insurance company, a hardware retail and wholesale business, apparel stores, and an auto dealership.[11][6][12][13][14]

Agro-industry and export

With the support of relatives including his cousin; politician and planter Howell Donald Shillingford, he expanded into agriculture, acquiring estates that produced limes, oranges, bananas, sugarcane, and other crops. In 1924, he established a lime processing factory in Newtown, followed by another in Soufrière. His operations later expanded to neighbouring islands, where he constructed additional lime processing plants in Trinidad and Grenada. This expansion broke the monopoly held by the British-owned L. Rose & Co., allowing local yellow lime growers to secure better prices for their produce.[12] He was a member of the board of the Dominica Banana Association. He also processed, manufactured, then exported (Dominica) bay rum.[6]

Later career

Lennox Honeychurch wrote that by the 1930s, the extended Shillingford family headed by A.C.S. and H. D. "had virtually controlled every aspect of Dominican society".[9][10] They held significant influence as they owned many of the island's plantations and controlled most of the commercial interests in Roseau;[15] which while wandering around, Patrick Leigh Fermor noted that "every shop appeared to be called Shillingford".[16] This combined with their membership of the legislature made them both directly and indirectly politically powerful.[17][18]

Politics

Independence

Shillingford opposed British political dominance by supporting the Dominica Taxpayers Reform Association. He was a financial backer of the 1932 Dominica Conference, which was attended by regional political figures, including Arthur Cipriani of Trinidad and Theophilus Marryshow of Grenada. The conference advocated for a federation of the British West Indian Territories. He was an early ally of Dominican barrister and activist Cecil E. A. Rawle, who married Shillingford's sister Eva in 1919.[19] And planter, legislator, and banker J. B. Charles (the father of Eugenia Charles). He was also allied with poet & editor J. R. Ralph Casimir, a Pan-Africanist and Marcus Garvey's UNIA organizer.[6][13]

Activism

Shillingford was noted by the British colonial administration for his criticism of the treatment of West Indian soldiers who served in World War I. He protested their assignment to labour battalions under poor conditions, arguing that they had been unfairly treated despite their service to their "mother country" Britain.[10][18][12][13] He was known as the best friend to the poor.[2]

Death

Legacy

References

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