Slave Trade CHY 4U. Trading Ship The Southwell Frigate Tradeing on ye Coast of Africa (c. 1760) by...

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Transcript of Slave Trade CHY 4U. Trading Ship The Southwell Frigate Tradeing on ye Coast of Africa (c. 1760) by...

Slave Trade

CHY 4U

Trading Ship

The Southwell Frigate Tradeing on ye Coast of Africa (c. 1760) by Nicholas Pocock.

Port Cities Bristol: Bristol’s Entry into the Slave Trade. 2003. http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/routes/bristol-to-africa/bristol-trading-port/slave-trade-entry/ (Sept. 14, 2010).

Trade and Triangular Trade

Jamaica, one of the biggest destinations for slaves

European trading forts on the African coast

Ibid,. http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/routes/places-involved/west-indies/ ; http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/routes/places-involved/europe/; http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/map/

Triangular Trade

Process

Slaves loaded onto a small boat and rowed out to the ship (note the African merchant)

A View of ye Jason Privateer (c. 1760) by Nicholas Pocock.

Ibid., http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/browse/slavery/detail-from-a-view-of-ye-jason-privateer/

Slave FortCape Coast Castle, Gold Coast

Jerome S. Handler and Michael L. Tuite, Jr. - Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia

Library. The Atlantic Slave Trade and Slave Life in the Americas: A Visual Record. European Forts and

Trading Posts in Africa. 2010. http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/return.php?categorynum=4&categoryName=European%20Forts

%20and%20Trading%20Posts%20in%20Africa (Sept. 26, 2010).

Accounts

Log book from the ship Black Prince showing slaves bought

Port Cities Bristol: Bristol and Transatlantic Slavery. 2003., http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/browse/slavery/page-

from-log-book-of-black-prince/ (Sept. 14, 2010).

Branding Irons

Handler and Tuite, http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/details.php?categorynum=6&categoryName=Slave%20Sales%20and%20Auctions:%20African%20Coast%20and%20the%20Americas&theRecord=30&recordCount=73

Found in the Wilberforce Museum in Hull, England

Force

Leg irons, shackles and chains

Port Cities Bristol, http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/browse/slavery/leg-irons/; http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/routes/from-africa-to-america/atlantic-crossing/people-taken-from-africa/; The Ouidah Museum of History – Themes: The Slave Trade. N.d. http://www.museeouidah.org/Theme-SlaveTrade.htm (Sept. 15, 2010).

Handcuffs and leg shackles

ConditionsPlan of the ship Brookes, from Thomas Clarkson, History of the Slave Trade

Port Cities Bristol, http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/browse/slavery/plan-of-slave-ship-brookes/

Diverse Peoples and Kingdoms Europeans referred to African areas as Guinea:

Yoruba Edo Igbo Baule Mende Asante Dahomey Kongo

Etc.

Destinations

An ideal plantation, 1762, from Diderot’s Dictionnaire des Sciences

Ibid., http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/browse/slavery/an-ideal-plantation/

Working in the Caribbean

Sugar cane, 1764

Sugar mill, 1762, from Diderot

Ibid., http://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/routes/places-involved/west-indies/years-work/

Sugar Boiling House

Trinidad, 1830s

Handler and Tuite, http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/details.php?categorynum=7&categoryName=New%20World%20Agriculture%20and%20Plantation%20Labor&theRecord=10&recordCount=114

Amistad

Joseph Cinque, from the Amistad Revolt, from A History of the Amistad Captives, 1840

Ibid., http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/details.php?categorynum=18&categoryName=Portraits%20and%20Illustrations%20of%20Individuals&theRecord=8&recordCount=75

People

West Africans from the Gold Coast, drawn in 1679

Ibid., http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/details.php?categorynum=18&categoryName=Portraits%20and%20Illustrations%20of%20Individuals&theRecord=2&recordCount=75; The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database. 2008. http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/index.faces (Sept. 29, 2010).

Some estimates say 12.5 million people, from 1526-1867, were forced to undergo the Middle Passage