Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
History,  Independent travel,  Jamaica,  Photography,  Travel Blog

Rose Hall: Great House Of Horrors

As we turn off the main A1 and climb the driveway towards the grand house, we only have a small inkling of the lessons in history we are about to receive. But before we start on the startling and dramatic story of Rose Hall, a brief partial history of Jamaica is necessary.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Rose Hall Great House

The earliest known inhabitants of this island were the Taino from South America who arrived on these shores in the 8th century. By the time Columbus arrived, first in 1494 and more significantly in 1502, it is estimated that the Taino population had reached around 100,000.

It was the Spanish who first started importing African slaves, yet they never completely exploited Jamaica as there was a greater attraction in the riches of South America. In came the British, first ousting the Spanish by allying with lawless pirates to ensure victory – the Spanish finally fled via what is still called Runaway Bay – and later by realising the value of sugar plantations.

View from RoseHall Great House
View from Rose Hall

With the Taino population having dwindled under Spanish rule, labour was needed, so in were brought an estimated 600,000 African slaves, most of whom were “bought” by trading manufactured goods from Britain. Something like 1 in 5 died on the way here, the rest subjected to inhumane, brutal treatment on the plantations, where they were “owned” by plantation bosses. 

Grounds of Rose Hall Great House
Grounds of Rose Hall

Slaves were traded like commodities, their lives were expendable, their welfare irrelevant. The brutality and oppression suffered by the slaves is unimaginable, as is the callous manner in which it was dished out by those in power, seeking riches. No wonder Jamaica celebrates its heroes. People blessed with the courage to fight and overturn such outrages are heroes in every sense of the word.

Image of Rose Hall Great House before restoration
Before renovation

Even the identity of slaves was stolen as they were forced to abandon their original African names and adopt the name of their “owner” – one reason why so many Caribbeans have English surnames to this day. Samuel Sharpe himself, martyred rebellion leader on the road to emancipation, bore the name of his “owner”, a different – white – Samuel Sharpe.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Inside Rose Hall

Sugar brought great riches to the planters and grand homes began to appear as a mark of power and authority on each plantation. It didn’t take long for the British to realise that construction of castles was inappropriate in the Caribbean climate, and so Jamaica began to sprout the “great houses”, the ostentatious homes of the wealthy plantation owners.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Inside Rose Hall

All of this brings us to Rose Hall, one of the few remaining, though heavily restored, great houses. Begun in 1750 by one George Ash and named after his wife Rose, construction was finally completed by Rose’s fourth husband, John Palmer, in 1780, as a so-called calendar house….365 windows, 52 doors and 12 bedrooms. After John and Rose’s death, ownership of the estate passed to a nephew’s wife, Annie Palmer. 

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Dining Room, Rose Hall

Annie was allegedly an evil white witch possessing extreme powers of voodoo. At Rose Hall, she brutally murdered three husbands, each one after a shorter marriage than the previous, as well as slaying an unspecified number of lovers. With an insatiable thirst for violence and brutality, Annie herself then fell victim to one of those lovers in a murderous rage. 

This woman’s propensity to evil did not begin or end with murder by her own hand. She would order the execution, by beheading, of slaves, purely for her own entertainment – she would gleefully watch their execution from her balcony. Any slave guilty of “transgression”, for instance being a few minutes late in emptying her commode, would be punished either by beheading or by being dropped into the dungeon and left to die by starvation. Apparently she liked to hear their screams of despair from beneath the house. Nice lady huh.

Annie imported bear traps to Jamaica, not to catch wild beasts but to ensnare any of the 2,000 slaves on the estate should they make a run for freedom. She finally met a gruesome end herself, murdered and buried in the grounds by her long time lover and murderous accomplice. What stories the walls of this grand house could tell.

Bear trap at Rose Hall Great House
Bear trap for inhumane purposes

There are several postscripts to this sinister history. Firstly, when the uprising came, nearly all of the great houses of the plantation owners across Jamaica  were razed to the ground, but such was the fear of the ghost of Annie Palmer, nobody had the courage to light the flame under Rose Hall, which instead fell slowly into disrepair until a wealthy American, John Rollins, set about restoring the place in the 1960s and making it the great house it now is once again.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Annie’s bedroom, Rose Hall
Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Annie’s bedroom with day bed for entertaining lovers

Secondly, when the builders moved in during renovation, they found that the stains on the bedroom wall were splashes of blood. Such was the brutality of one husband’s murder that the evidence was still there over a century later.

After Annie’s death, the next owners witnessed their maid plunge to her death from Annie’s balcony, seemingly pushed from behind by some unseen force. They sold up and moved out.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
These rooms could tell stories…

And last but not least, now that the sumptuous house is open to visitors, there have been numerous examples of a mysterious female figure appearing in photographs – a white apparition reflected in a mirror, a face at a window, a dark image on a stairway. Visitors have felt a presence when alone in a room, workers have heard cries from behind locked doors.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Rose Hall

In recent times, skeletal remains positively identified as those of Annie Palmer have been exhumed and re-buried just outside the house in an attempt to reconcile Annie’s remains with her soul. But maybe the restless soul still walks this sinister property.

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Rose Hall

Modern day research into this tale of horror has established that Annie was an orphan brought up in a witchcraft influenced environment, but by the same token has established that Annie spent a lifetime eating her meals off lead plates. Was lead poisoning in some way responsible for her state of mind?

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Majestic building, terrible history

Last word, perhaps, goes to, of all people, Johnny Cash. Cash lived for many years in Cinnamon Hill, a house just above Rose Hall on adjoining land, and became close friends with the Rollins family during restoration. In true Johnny Cash style, he penned “The Ballad Of Annie Palmer”, telling just a little of this terrible sordid tale.

We’ve studied our photographs carefully. Not a ghostly figure anywhere. But that’s not to say that Annie isn’t there, lurking in the shadows, just waiting for her next deadly opportunity…

Rose Hall Great House Jamaica
Rose Hall today

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