Further losses came from the abolition of slavery, in which the family was heavily invested, and in sugar crop failures and hurricane damage to their real estate holdings.
In 1797, AA Lindo & Co. owned two vessels trading coffee, cotton and dry goods between Kingston and Jérémie.
In 1805 he subdivided Kingston Pen into small lots which then formed a mixed race working class township known as Lindo's Town.
He published his correspondence with William Huskisson, the President of the Board of Trade: The Injurious Tendency of the modifying of our Navigation Laws.
[10] On 5 February 1812 he married Luna Henriques and "settled £21,000 on his new wife and children she might have - this fund was for her 'separate use and benefit without the control of Abraham Alexander Lindo.