Foreword from The Prism

The book, The Prism is a one-of-a-kind project that came about due to the seemingly silent stand taken by past fathers and mothers of the Giscombe family. Their silence left many unanswered questions on the minds of the young.

The book is therefore a concerted effort by this one family member who was moved to dig deep into the past of this family, to forever break that silence and mystery behind this unusual family name.

In over twenty years of research, the project has evolved into a book that tells a great deal of the truth, not only to present a family tree, but reveals the tremendous worldwide contributions made by members of the family.

The Prism reveals that one man’s mystical appearance, a Caucasian “The Abraham” of the family, James Giscome, Sr. his European name and country of origin still unproven, suddenly arrived in the parish of St. James, Jamaica in 1770 with a deliberate effort to settle and make a stand in that society.

The book reveals how possible it is for anyone with a colonial background to discover how intermingled and entwined one is in terms of race, as in Jamaica’s case which had to adopt as its motto “Out of Many One People”. The book reveals that the Giscombes were pioneers, plantation and slave owners in Jamaica, builders of the Panama railway in the 1840s and then the Panama canal in the late 1890s. It goes on to tell the circumstances around the causes and the building of the Panama Canal. It tells the history of family member John Robert Giscome, one of the greatest pioneers, discoverers, gold miners and reporters to help settle the Prince George region of British Columbia, Canada. Then in a later chapter, it is revealed that the family has given to the world a Black Man, Col. Claudius Rowe, II Jr., the only one to obtain two air wings first by taking part in the Canadian Air Force then in the secret Tuskegee Air operation out of the United States of America.

The Prism displays hundreds of historical data that can be used in a personal family research, and assist in how and where to get information on one’s family.

The hope is that if one attains this book, one will not only be able to research, and enjoy the historical content, and associates one’s self with the past even if one is not of the immediate family, but will be a means of encouragement for one to even establish a family history for one’s family.