Thomas Rigby
Thomas Rigby was a Welsh publican and barber who lived in Kidwelly and Llanelli during the nineteenth century. He was among very few Black people recorded in the district during the first half of the 1800s.
Early life
Rigby was born c. 1783, though his parentage, birth name, and birthplace remain unknown. At approximately eight years old, he was abducted by slave-hunters and taken to an unknown destination in the West Indies. The origin of the Rigby surname is uncertain, though it may be linked to Richard Rigby, an MP of Mistley Hall, Essex, who owned sugar, cocoa, and coffee plantations in Antigua, Grenada, and Jamaica.In 1817, Rigby arrived in Kidwelly in the company of Reverend John Norcross.
Family and career
On 19 January 1819, Rigby married Mary Richards, a local woman who had grown up on a farm near Llanelli. Neither appears to have been literate, as both left their marks rather than signatures on the marriage certificate. Mary's younger sister, Elizabeth Richards, later became the mother of the musician Joseph Parry.Thomas and Mary ran several public houses in Kidwelly and Llanelli over the following years. Thomas occasionally held other occupations, working as a gentleman's servant and a barber.
Thomas and Mary had nine children, though not all survived to adulthood: George, Mary Ann, another son named George, Alexander, Thomas junior, Elizabeth, William, Jane, and Caroline. Mary Ann became a cook, working in service for a doctor's family in Swansea, while William became a cabinet maker and moved to Merthyr Tydfil.