HomePage                                  Pre 17th Century

Why were slaves needed

Why African slaves

The Transatlantic Trade

The Outward Passage

The Middle Passage

The Slave Auctions

Plantation Life

The Return Passage

Bristol v Liverpool

Royal African Co.

Merchant Venturers

Edward Colston

John Pinney

The End of Slavery

Bristol Today

Acknowledgements

                      

The Outward Voyage

 

For the Bristol merchants the slave trade seemed an 'open sesame' to prosperity. For example, the 'Warmley Brass Company', owned by the Goldney and Champion families, exported 'Guinea' cooking pots.The outward voyage from Bristol was made with trinkets, beads, copper rods, cotton goods, guns and alcohol which were to be traded for slaves off the coast of West Africa.

 

Part of a record kept by a Bristol merchant.a cargo list of a ship going to Africa from Bristol in the 18th century.

"An estimate for a cargo to purchase 250 Negroes at Bonny"

80 rolls of blue chintz cloth

100 rolls of cotton cloth with fine small stripes (small)

100 rolls of cotton cloth with fine small stripes (large)

100 cotton rolls with red and blue mixed stripes.

30 cloths blue and white checked

300 muskets bright barrels

300 muskets black barrels

40 pair common large pistols

2 tons lead in small bars

14 tons iron 1000 copper rods

80 cases bottles of brandy

5 cases pipe beads

 

All goods could be traded profitably although African slave traders were not to be treated lightly and would drive a hard bargain. According to the French merchant Jean Barbot, who spent some time on the Gold Coast in the late 17th Century, the people there had at first been swindled because it never entered their thoughts that white men would cheat them.  

 

Captured Villagers.jpg (393973 bytes)However, they soon learned better and became very careful traders. Both sides cheated when they could, as the trade was rough and unregulated, with blackmail and deceit more common than honest dealing. There was one French captain who bought a large quantity of gold and sailed home congratulating himself on having made a fortune in exchange for his trashy goods, only to discover, when he arrived home, that he had actually bought a worthless load of old brass filings.

 

 

Rotting Castles.jpg (313394 bytes)

 

 

 

Slaves were held in holding forts on the coast until slave ships arrived to transport them across the Atlantic Ocean.

 

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