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The Slave Ship

Page 52

by Marcus Rediker


  trans-Saharan

  triangular trade

  violence required in

  see also abolition movement; merchants; Middle Passage; slave ships

  sloops

  Smale, John

  Smith, John Samuel

  Smith, William

  Smyth, Richard

  Snelgrave, William

  on captains’ relations with slaves

  collective judgment of captains sought by

  on desecrating dead slave bodies

  instructions for his first mate

  Morice as employer of

  on sailors’ violence against slaves

  on slave communication

  on slaves helping manage ship

  on slaves refusing to eat

  slaves sing song of praise to

  on trading plans gone awry

  on “white” men’s status

  Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade

  Society for the Improvement of Naval Architecture

  Society of Merchant Venturers .

  South Carolina

  Charleston.

  on Declaration of Independence on slave trade

  as destination for slaves.

  Gola captives sent to

  Laurens

  slave ships built in

  Southey, Robert

  South Sea Company

  speculum oris

  Speedwell (ship)

  Speers, William

  Squirrel (ship)

  Stalkartt, Marmaduke

  Stanfield, Field.

  Stanfield, James Field

  as actor

  on Africans

  on arrival on African coast

  becomes a sailor

  common sailor’s perspective of

  Essay on the Study and Composition of Biography, An.

  Guinea Voyage: A Poem in Three Books, The..

  on merchants

  on Middle Passage

  Observations on a Guinea Voyage .n..

  on recruitment of crews

  on slaves’ arrival in New World

  on slave ship as floating factory

  on slave-ship sailors

  on slave trade’s effect on Africa

  on voyage to Africa

  “Written on the Coast of Africa in the year,”

  Staniforth, Thomas

  Starke, Thomas

  Steel, David

  Steele, William

  Stephens, Thomas

  Stockman, Isaac.

  Street, Captain

  strikes

  Strong, Mathew

  Substance of the Evidence of Sundry Persons on the Slave-Trade Collected in the Course of a Tour Made in the Autumn of the Year (Clarkson)

  sugar

  suicide

  by sailors

  by slaves .

  surgeons, see doctors (surgeons)

  Susu

  Sutherland, William

  Swain, Richard

  Swansea (Massachusetts)

  Swift (ship)

  Tacky’s Revolt

  Tarleton, John

  Tartar (ship)

  Taylor, Anthony

  Teast, Sydenham

  Temne

  Tewkesbury (ship)

  Thetis (ship)

  Thomas (ship)

  Thomas, Hugh

  Thomas and John (ship)

  Thompson, Thomas

  Thomson, Daniel

  Thoughts upon the African Slave Trade (Newton)

  thumbscrews

  Tio

  Tittle, John

  tobacco

  Todd, Hinson

  Told, Silas

  on captains

  enters slave trade

  on insurrection on Loyal George

  promotion of

  on punishment of slave resistance

  on sharks.

  on suicide by sailor

  “tormentor, the,”

  Towne, James

  transatlantic chain

  trans-Saharan slave trade

  Triumph (ship)

  Trotter, Thomas

  True Blue (ship)

  Tucker, Henry

  Tucker, Peter

  Tucker, Thomas

  Tucker, Timothy

  Tuohy, David.

  Turner, John

  Unity (ship)

  Universal Dictionary of the Marine (Falconer).

  Unsworth, Barry

  Vassa, Gustavus, see Equiano, Olaudah

  Vernon, Samuel and William.

  Vili

  violence

  captains using

  as cascading downward

  coming to grips with

  fighting among slaves

  of merchants

  merchants concerned about excessive

  Newton employs terror

  as pervasive on slave ships

  of sailors against slaves

  slave trade depends of

  Stanfield on shipboard

  terror used aboard slave ships

  see also flogging

  Virginia

  Wadstrom, Carl Bernard

  wages ..

  Wainwright, Captain

  Wallis, Richard

  Wanton, Captain

  war

  mobilization of military labor for

  slaves armed during

  slave ships as war machines

  as source of slaves

  Ward, John

  Wasp (ship)

  watches

  water

  controlling use of

  as critical on slave ships

  dehydration as cause of mortality

  rainwater

  Watkins, William

  Watt, Charles

  Webster, John

  Welsh, Alexander

  Welsh (Welch), John

  Wesley, John.

  West-Central Africa

  Kongo

  as source of slaves

  see also Angola

  West Indies

  Antigua

  Morice trades in

  St. Kitts

  superfluous sailors in

  in triangular trade

  see also Barbados; Jamaica

  Westmore, James.

  wharfingers

  whipping, see flogging (whipping)

  Whitfield, Peter

  Wilberforce, William

  Williams, Joseph

  Williams, Thomas

  Wilson, David

  Stanfield sails with.

  violence used by

  Wilson, Isaac

  Windham, Lord

  windsails

  Windward Coast

  belief in going home to Guinea after death in

  foods from

  Fraser on slaves from

  longboat and yawl in trade on

  Newton trades on

  as source of slaves

  Winterbottom, Thomas.

  Wolof

  Wood, Samuel

  Woodward, Robert

  Wright, John

  “Written on the Coast of Africa in the year ” (Stanfield)

  Wroe, John

  Yates, Thomas.

  yawls

  yaws

  Yoruba

  Young Hero (ship)

  Zong (ship)

  ILLUSTRATION SOURCES AND CREDITS

  Insert

  Page 1. Top: Detail of “Negro’s Cannoes, carrying slaves, on board of Ships, att Manfroe” in Jean Barbot, “A Description of the Coasts of North and South Guinea; and of Ethiopia Inferior, vulgarly Angola: being a New and Accurate Account of the Western Maritime Countries of Africa,” in Awnsham Churchill and John Churchill, comp., A Collection of Voyages and Travels, some now first printed from Original Manuscripts, others now first published in English (London, 1732), vol. 5, collection of the author. Bottom: “Captain Bartho. Roberts with two Ships, Viz. the Royal Fortune and Ranger, takes in sail in Whydah Road on the Coast of Guiney, Jan. 11th, 1721/2,” in Captain Charles Johnson, A General Histor
y of the Pyrates, from their first Rise and Settlement in the Island of Providence, to the Present Time (London, 1724), Darlington Library, University of Pittsburgh.

  Page 2. Top: Portrait of Sir Humphrey Morice, ivory sculpture by David Le Marchand (1674-1726), courtesy of the Art Gallery of Ontario. Middle: “His excellency Henry Laurens, president of congress & minister plenipotentiary for treating of peace with Grt. Britain,” after a drawing by Pierre Eugène du Simitière, in Portraits of generals, ministers, magistrates, members of Congress, and others, who have rendered themselves illustrious in the revolution of the United States of North America (London: R. Wilkinson and J. Debrett, 1783), courtesy of the Library of Congress. Bottom: “The Requin,” Barbot, “A Description of the Coasts,” translated and republished in Antoine-François Prevost, L’Histoire generale des voyages (La Haye: P. de Hondt, 1747-80), collection of the author.

  Page 3. Top: Nicholas Pocock (1749-1821), “Wapping, Bristol,” c. 1760, © Bristol’s City Museum & Art Gallery. Bottom: William Jackson, Liverpool slave ship, c. 1780, © National Museums Liverpool, Merseyside Maritime Museum.

  Page 4. All: William Falconer, Universal Dictionary of the Marine (orig. publ. 1768, republ. London, 1815), courtesy of Mystic Seaport, G.W. Blunt Library.

  Page 5. “Transport des Nègres dans le Colonies,” lithograph by Pretexat Oursel, courtesy of the Musée d’Histoire de la Ville et du Pays Malouin, Saint Malo, France.

  Page 6. Top: Job Ben Solomon, Gentleman’s Magazine 20(1750), Darlington Library, University of Pittsburgh. Bottom: Thomas Clarkson, The History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-Trade by the British Parliament (London, 1808), vol. 1, Hillman Library, University of Pittsburgh.

  Page 7. Detail of Emmanuel Bowen, A New & Accurate Map of Negroland and the Adjacent Countries; also Upper Guinea, shewing the principal European settlements, & distinguishing wch. belong to England, Denmark, Holland &c. The Sea Coast & some of the Rivers being drawn from Surveys & the best Modern Maps and Charts, & regulated by Astron. Observns (London, 1747), collection of the author.

  Page 8. Top: Detail of “The Prospect of the English Castle, at Anamabou,” in Barbot, “A Description of the Coasts,” collection of the author. Bottom: “Procession to ye Temple of ye Great Snake on Crowning of ye King,” in Thomas Astley, comp., A New General Collection of Travels and Voyages, Consisting of the most esteemed Relations, which have been hitherto Published in any Language (London, 1742-1747), vol. 3, collection of the author. Originally published in Jean Baptiste Labat, Voyage du Chevalier des Marchais en Guinee . . . fait en 1725, 1726, & 1727 (Amsterdam, 1731).

  Page 9. Top: “The City of Loango,” in Astley, ed., A New General Collection of Travels and Voyages, vol. 3, collection of the author. Originally published in D. O. Dapper, Description de l’Afrique . . . Traduite du Flamand (Amsterdam,1686; 1st ed., 1668). Bottom: Thomas Clarkson, Letters on the slave-trade, and the state of the natives in those parts of Africa, . . . contiguous to Fort St. Louis and Goree (London, 1791), courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.

  Page 10. Top: Portrait of Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavas Vassa, the African. Written by Himself (London, 1790), Library of Congress. Middle: Portrait of James Field Stanfield by Martin Archer Shee, undated, courtesy of the Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens (Tyne and Wear Museum). Bottom: Portrait of John Newton by John Russell, 1788, courtesy of the John Newton Project (www.johnnewton.org) and the World Mission Society.

  Page 11. Top: Slave ship shackles, c. 1780, collection of the author. Bottom: Cat-o’-nine-tails, © National Maritime Museum.

  Page 12. Top: Isaac Cruikshank, “The Abolition of the Slave Trade, Or the inhumanity of dealers in human flesh exemplified in Captn. Kimber’s treatment of a young Negro girl of 15 for her virjen modesty,” 1792, Library of Congress, British Cartoon Collection. Bottom: “(Traversée) Danse de Nègres,” Amédée Grehan, ed., La France Maritime (Paris, 1837), courtesy of the Haverford College Library.

  Page 13. Top: Lieutenant Francis Meynell, “Slave deck of the Albaroz, Prize to the Albatross, 1845,” National Maritime Museum. Bottom: The Dying Negro, engraving by James Neagle, frontispiece for Thomas Day, The Dying Negro: A Poem (London, 1793), courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.

  Page 14. “Representation of an Insurrection aboard a Slave-Ship,” in Carl B. Wadström, An Essay on Colonization, particularly applied to the Western coast of Africa . . . in Two Parts (London, 1794), courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.

  Page 15. “Marché aux Nègres,” by Laurent Deroy, after a drawing by Johann Moritz Rugendas, courtesy of the New York Public Library.

  Page 16. Top: Portrait of Thomas Clarkson by Charles Turner after a painting by Alfred Edward Chalon, courtesy of Donald A. Heald Rare Books. Bottom: Description of a Slave Ship (London: James Phillips, 1789), courtesy of the Peabody-Essex Museum.

  In Chapter 10

  Page 312. Plan of an African Ship’s Lower Deck, with Negroes in the proportion of not quite one to a Ton (orig. publ. Plymouth, 1788; republ. Bristol, 1789), courtesy of the Bristol Record Office.

  Page 315. Plan of an African Ship’s Lower Deck, with Negroes in the proportion of not quite one to a Ton (Philadelphia: Mathew Carey, 1789), courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia. Page 316. Plan and Sections of a Slave Ship (London: James Phillips, 1789), courtesy of the Peabody-Essex Museum.

  Page 330. “Plan and Sections of a Slave Ship,” Wadström, Essay on Colonization, courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.

 

 

 


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