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Slavetrade and colonialism
The English Involvement
- Slavery is a term most of us are
familiar with. Most people are aware of the part America had to
play in the business of buying and selling black people into
forced labour, but the United Kingdom also had their part in
this twisted scheme that yielded an enormous amount of money for
certain people in the aristocracy and otherwise.
- Way back in the day England was
well known for it's ships and the advantages this gave them in
terms of defending their seas and also transportation. The two
main commercial activities that gave England their maritime
advantage were sugar and slaves. The two factors actually worked
together very closely as slaves were needed to harvest the sugar
crops in what the British Empire called the 'New World'.
- Ships would leave Britain with
cargo of cheap manufactured goods from Liverpool and Bristol and
travel to West Africa where they would be exchanged for slaves.
The slaves were then taken to the Caribbean where they were
exchanged for sugar that was then brought back to Europe and
sold for a very large profit. The huge monetary gain made sure
people were not overly concerned with the humanitarian aspect of
the slave trade or even the ethical issues. They were making
money that would enable them to buy more ships and as such give
Britain the advantage of being the world's most forceful naval
power.
- 1562 saw the first English slave
trader, John Hawkins, leave England with 100
men and 3 ships. He captured 300 slaves in Sierra Leone and sold
them in Hispaniola. He was a resident of Deptford, South-East
London and on his return with his ships filled with goods such
as hides, ginger and sugar, he found a new business partner in
Queen Elizabeth I.
- By 1567, Hawkins was onto his 3rd
slaving expedition and this time he took along Sir
Francis Drake. He was yet another pioneer of the slave
trade and also a Deptford resident. His family were well
connected with slave trading as was Sir Walter Raleigh.
- The English Royal family had a
great connection with slavery starting from Elizabeth I. The
Duke of York used to get his initials, 'DY',
branded onto the left buttock or breast of each of the 3000
slaves who were his. He shipped them out to the Caribbean.
- In 1624 the English colonised Barbados and St. Kitts and approximately 23 years later, the
first sugar from Barbados was sent to England. England captured
Jamaica from the Spanish and the slave trade had yet another
place in which to thrive.
- An estimate of the population of
slaves in the British Caribbean during the period of 1776 to
1848 is approximately 428,000 out of a population of 500,000.
- As most people know, the British
are a very particular set of people and as such they decided to
create a company that would control the British slave trade.
This company was called the Royal African Company
and was established in 1672. Between the years of 1680 and 1686,
the Royal African Company transported an average of 5,000 slaves
per year. They received annual grants from parliament totalling
around £90,000 overall and even had King Charles II as a shareholder, maintaining the
Royal involvement with
slavery.
- Soon enough private traders wanted
in on the lucrative trading of 'human cattle' and in 1698
parliament approved private traders to participate in the slave
trade on payment of 10% duty on English goods exported to
Africa. The Royal African Company was abolished at this time.
- Business started booming and in
1700 Liverpool's first slave ship called the 'Liverpool
Merchant' transported 220 slaves to Barbados and sold them for
£4,239 (pounds sterling). That's less than £20 per slave.
Liverpool had 8 major slave traders who together could transport
25,820. That worked out around 50-550 per ship.
- In 1733 England signed a treaty
with Spain called the 'Treaty of Utrecht'. This treaty basically
granted England monopoly of the Spanish slave trade for 30
years. England promised at least 144,000 slaves at the rate of
4,800 slaves per year.
- It wasn't until 1772 that
Lord Mansfield came to a decision and proclaimed it
illegal to remove any person forcibly from England. The slave
trade still continued due to the fact that so many of the major
political players in Liverpool and such were heavily involved
with slavery. One prime example was Richard Pennant who was Liverpool's MP. He owned 8,000 acres of sugar
plantations and over 600 slaves in Jamaica. He was in office
between 1777 and 1780 then re-elected in 1784 to 1790. Three out
of 41 councillors in Liverpool were slave ship owners or major
investors in the slave trade and during the years of 1787 and
1807, all 20 mayors who held office in Liverpool financed or
owned slave ships.
- In 1808, over 100 years since the
British Empire became involved in slave trading, the
Trans-Atlantic slave trade was abolished within the Empire and
also in the United States. It wasn't until 1827 however that
Britain declares the slave trade as piracy making it punishable
by death. In 1833 slavery was abolished throughout Europe and
the Emancipation Act went through British parliament. It still
took another 11 years until 1838 before slavery was fully
abolished within the British Empire.
- Sadly the unequal system continued
with the first indicator being an award of some £20,000,000 (20
million pounds) to the planters by way of compensation and
nothing was awarded to any former slaves. The way the system
then started to work made things even more difficult for former
slaves. They were forced to continue working in arduous
conditions on the plantations due to the system introducing high
taxes on smallholdings, high rates for licenses or small traders
and contracts to shackle the labourers to the large plantations.
- In 1844 the shortage of labour led
to the introduction of indentured labour from another of
Britain's colonies, India. The Indian labourers made conditions
worse for former slaves as they undermined any attempts to
achieve improve conditions through strikes. By 1917 145,000
Indians had been transported to Trinidad and 238,000 to Guyana.
Jamaica was also affected with around 39,000 immigrants. The
only island not affected was Barbados.
- England's involvement in the slave
trade can be seen to this very day in that the National Gallery
in London was funded on it as was Lloyd's of London and the Bank
of England. During the 17th and 18th centuries, involvement in
the slave trade was actually seen to be a respectable
occupation! Many of the London merchants who were taking almost
3/4 of the sugar imported from the West Indies lived in South
London in Blackheath.
- Suffice to say we're living in a
country built on money gained through the sale of our ancestors.
They laboured on plantations all over the Caribbean and their
toil funded many of the banks we put our hard-earned money into
today. Don't be fooled into thinking the mental enslavement of
black people is over. Many of us know it isn't. Geraint
Smith said 'Slavery is at the heart of the wealth of
London' (1993). Let's not forget that fact.
Sources:
http://www.britishempire.co.uk/
http://212.212.12.5/arm/CronOfColonialism.html
http://www.qub.ac.uk/english/imperial/carib/slavery.htm
http://www.flamemag.dircon.co.uk/slavery_in_london.html
The Commerce Of Shame
- Millions of people in America and
other countries, live in the condemnation not to learn ever
elements about their descents, their ancestors past, their
history and their racial origin. They are the descendants of
slaves who lived in their skins the commerce of shame.
- The first man with African origin
who went to America at 1492, was a member of Columbus crew. He
was a free man from Spain. In 1494 at the second Columbus
mission to America, at list two other black men were landing at
the island Espaniol. When Spanish started to colonize Caribbean
obliged the nativers, who called them "Idians", to do all the
labor that Spanish disdained to do. Very soon most of Indian
population died from the illnesses and the bad treatment and the
colonists looked in Africa for exploitation. The colonists found
more easier and cheaper to import Africans as slaves. Slavery
was familiar to Spanish because they used African and Jews
slaves and while their law aloud slavery, at the same time
declared that slavery is "the most detestable thing".
- From the island Espaniol, slavery
of African people spreaded to Cuba, Puerto Rico, Jamaica,
Mexico, Peru. From there to the rest of South America. In 1619 a
Dutch merchant imported "twenty and something" African people,
in chains, forcibly to work at Jamestown of Virginia inaugurated
with that way the slavery in English colonies of north America.
- Merchants from Boston at 1644
chartered the first ship with the name "Rainbow" to transport
systematically Africans to North America. The period between
1740 and 1810 constituted the prosperity of slavetrade because
the number of slaves who transported each year in America
approached the 60.000. The aims of slave-trade were to make
money for the ship owners who, having bought slaves very cheaply
in Africa, sold them again in the Americas as a large profit to
slave owners, who would use them to do all the hard labor on
farms and cotton plantations. Since making money was the only
objective, no consideration was given to the Africans as human
beings. Many slave owners treated slaves just like common
animals, often whipping them and even tying them up.
- The right number of all African
people who transported to America is not possible to be
calculate. Today we can say that this number approached the 10
or 12 million. Lots of them died in African coasts waiting for
the ships to go or drowned in the mindle of the trip to America.
From the survivors most of them, 95%, went to Latin America.
Brazil received the most of African people, about 5 million,
Spanish colonies received 2 million and the rest of them went to
English, France, Dutch and Danish colonies in Caribbean.
- In time, slave-traders developed
preferences about the origin of slaves. "Akin" from Gold Coast
was very agitator race, or "Ebo" from Nigeria was very teachable
and slaves from Angola was very warlike. Some of the races of
slaves who went to America were the "Bolof", "Mandinka",
"Barbara" from Gambia, "Akin" and "Fetu" from
Sierra Leone and
Gold Coast, "Fo", "Ebo" and "Yuroba" from
Togo, Nigeria and
Cameroon, "Voudou", "Bango" from Congo and
Angola. For the
today's descendants of those slaves is not possible to find any
element that can connect them with those races and those
nations. The only successful try, but not 100% reliable for some
people, was from the author of the book "Roots" Alex Haley, who
through narration from the both sides of Atlantic connect his
origin with the race of "Mandinka" from Gambia. For the most of
people like Haley who want to know about their origin, that kind
of connection with the past is a dream. The slave-traders didn't
mention the slaves' nationality or their names to the people who
bought them, that's why the genealogical research be came not
possible.
- The women slaves had to be young
and beautiful and they were often sexualy abused by the owners.
The men slaves though, had to be strong and healthy.
- The price of a slave followed the
law of offer and demand. In 1750 with the development of
plantations in Brazil, India and America, the price of the
slaves was very high. The slave dealers made so much money that
soon Africans came to be known as "black gold". Slaves were sold
in the Americans for about 150 dollars a head! Later when the
slave-trade declared illegal Africans brought much higher price.
The slaves didn't know about their future when the merchants
bought them. The English merchant William Snalgave said : "these
poor people, they think that we want to eat them"...
- The transportation of slaves to
America was tragical. The ships were dramatically full and the
slave ship captains were making less space for a slave in the
ship then a man in the coffin... The ships captains could not
resist cramming their slaves into every foot of space, even
though they might lose up to 25% of the lot on the way across
the ocean. For the conditions of transportation and the bad
treatment to slaves from the owners, the English historian David
Scald said: "The slave traders should be called Devils rather
than Christian and that it is a heinous crime to buy them. The
slave owning performed a crime against humanity because they
simply knew better"... Only in the beginning of 1800 the
conditions of slavery transportation were improved. Then the
mortality of slaves was very low and from the 25% in 1700
dropped to 15% after the 1730 and only to 5% or 10% in early
1900.
- Many of the slaves of course were
tried to escape. Those who were tried to escape while the ships
were still in African coasts had big chances of success. Those
who didn't make it so, the trip to America was a trip with no
way back... The slaves in America continued the fight for
freedom. Despite the risks some slaves tried to undermine the
slavery system. Some slaves chose to destroy properties or fake
illness to avoid having the work. Some of them chose the way of
rousing, in many places, like Espaniol, Mexico, Jamaica,
Barbados Islands. The final big rousing in U.S.A. at 1831 had
leader the black preach of slaves Nat Turner who was killed
because his men killed 40 white people in north-eastern
Virginia. The most successful rousing was from the slaves in
Haiti, who finally won their freedom at 1804.
- As humans the slaves drew up
elements from their African background and the relations among
them to create a number of bright and characteristics
civilizations. These civilizations helped them to maintain a sense of control and dignity and resist the humiliation of
slavery. Today in modern societies of America these
civilizations distinguished. Caribbean today with the black
majority, characterised with the African way in religion,
culture, language, music, dance and tradition. "Voudou" from
Haiti has characterised from the professor of History of Art in
Yale University, Robert Thompson, as "one attainment of symbolic
intercource of people with African origin in the west globe: a
vibrating composition of traditional religions from Kongo and
Yurobal with influences from catholic church".
- The book "Flash of the Spirit" of
the professor Robert Thompson, shows that five African
civilizations--Yuroba, Kongo, Ejagham, Mande and Cross
River--have informed and are reflected in the aesthetic, social
and metaphysical traditions (music, sculpture, textiles,
architecture, religion) of black people in the United States,
Cuba, Haiti, Trinidad, Mexico, Brazil, and other places in the
New World.
- Brazil today has the majority of
people with African origin in America: has 70 million, witch is
the half of the country's population. A visitor in north-eastern
states of Brazil will agree with the missionary Antonio Veairra
who said: "Brazil has the body of America and the soul of
Africa". In Salvador, the capital of Brazilian state of Bia,
most of the population have African origin and the visitor can
see the old castle of slaves, the church with the black Saints
where prayed and the houses where served. Food, art, music and
dance have the collor of Africa.
- During the revolutionary war in
America ( 1775-1783) many Americans turned against slavery.
These Americans came to believe that slavery had no place in a
nation that had been formed to protect the natural human rights.
The first anti-slavery article was written in 1774 and published
in March 81775 in the news paper "Pennsylvania journal and the
weekly advertiser", and include the "Sentiments of Justice and
Humanity". Few weeks later in April 14, 1775 the first
anti-slavery society was formed in Philadelphia.
- In those years the abolitionist
movement was formed. Slaves were suspicions of whites who told
them about the "Underground Railroad" that would take them to
the freedom. The "Underground Railroad" was composed of
volunteers who would hide slaves traveling North to Canada.
Slaves were hidden durring daylight hours at stops along the
route and using the North Star, they moved in the dark to the
next location 10 or 15 miles north. Until they reached Canada,
they were never complete safe. If they were caught by a slave
catcher or United States marshal, they would be returned to
their master, who would probably make a great display of
flogging them. It was very risky for whites to be involved, but
it was even more dangerous for blacks who helped slaves to
escape. Facing a death sentence if they were captured, it took
great courage for them to help slaves to escape. Almost every
year after 1800 the "Underground Railroad" assisted hundreds of
slaves to escape to places in North.
- Slave trade abolished with law at
1807 in Caribbean, 1808 in U.S.A. and at 1850 in Brazil, yet
slavery and aspects of the slave trade continued well into the
19th century and today slavery still exist in the children of
Africa who live in North and South America and some times they
are the majority of the population. Refuse to be defeated those
people and their ancestors, they have participate with their
sweat, their gins and their civilisations to the creation of
societies. Their history is the hard history of the endless
ability of human spirit to face the difficulties and survive.
İKostas Christakis - January '99
Abolition heroes
William Wilberforce (1759-1833) For 18 years, from
1788, Wilberforce annually tabled anti-slavery motions in
Parliament. In August 1833 - a month after his death - the
slave trade was abolished.
Oladuah Equiano (c.1745-c.1797) Born in the West
African kingdom of Benin in 1745, Equiano was sold into
slavery at the age of 11. He became a key member of the
Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade and the principal
spokesman of Britain's black community.
Ignatius Sancho (1729-1780) Sold into slavery,
Sancho, the first African writer published in Britain, became a
symbol of eloquence to the abolitionist movement. He was
the first African to vote in a British election.
Notice: This article was for the largest part written
by Kostas Christakis.
Thank you Kostas.
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