The Atlantic Slave Trade (Six Things) Flashcards
How was the slave trade organised?
- Triangular trade route from Britain to West Africa to the Caribbean
- Manufactured goods went from Britain to West Africa
- Enslaved people forcibly moved from West Africa to the Caribbean
- Raw materials traded from the Caribbean back to Britain
- British slave factors set up permanent trading posts in Africa
- Enslaved people would be sold to plantation owners in the Caribbean
Why were slaves from Africa used to produce sugar?
- The use of slave labour kept production costs down
- Caribbean natives too few in number to produce it
- Indentured servants from Britain could not withstand the conditions
- Africa seen as capable of providing a ‘bottomless pit’ of cheap labour
- Africans could be legally enslaved as not Christian
- Racist attitudes of the time suggested Africans were inferior
Why were tropical crops like sugar important to the British economy?
- Sugar the most valuable commodity in Europe by 1750
- Over 60 per cent of British exports in 1800 linked to the triangular trade
- Sugar in high demand in Britain to sweeten other tropical goods like tea and coffee
- Sugar cheaper than other sweeteners, such as honey
- Slavers and planters spent most of their wealth in Britain
- Large profits could be made due to the use of an enslaved labour force
What were the effects of the slave trade on British port cities?
- Bristol became the centre of Britain’s sugar trade
- Liverpool’s shipbuilding industry expanded to provide slave ships
- Merchant banking and insurance brokers developed in London
- Other cities, like Glasgow and Manchester, profitted from trade in slave-grown goods
- All became more developed and increased in terms of size and population
- Monuments were built and street names changed in honour of residents linked to the trade
What were the wider impacts of the slave trade on the British economy?
- Increased individual, corporate and national wealth
- Profits reinvested into other industries, such as textiles
- May have helped to kickstart the Industrial Revolution
- Increased the market for other luxury goods
- Investment in municipal projects, such as universities and libraries
- More jobs available in directly and indirectly-connected industries
Why did the slave trade have a negative impact on the Caribbean islands?
- The native ‘Arawak’ population were wiped out
- Became overdependent on sugar
- Small-scale farms were taken over by large plantations
- Natural landscape was destroyed to make way for plantations
- Slave codes instilled a culture of fear
- Created a racialised society with a wide gap between rich and poor
What were the impacts of the slave trade on African societies?
- Depopulation, with over 12 million forcibly migrated to the ‘New World’
- Lack of people to farm the land led to famine
- Increased tribal conflict as slaves were usually prisoners of war
- Native crafts and industries died out
- Law and order collapsed
- Paved the way for colonisation
What happened at slave factories in West Africa?
- Captured slaves examined by a doctor on arrival
- Branded as proof of purchase by slave factors
- Regularly beaten and flogged
- Usually separated by sex
- Chained together in underground dungeons for extended periods
- Could wait for months for slave ships to arrive
What was the experience for enslaved people during the Middle Passage?
- Could be tightly or loosely packed
- Male slaves kept in the hold until clear of land or in poor weather
- Women the victims of sexual abuse
- Had to lie in their own faeces
- Given food that was unfamiliar and difficult to digest
- Could be forced to dance for the crew’s amusement
How were slaves sold in the Caribbean?
- Auctions the most common method of sale
- Could also be sold in scrambles
- Those not sold could be acquired for free in the ‘refuse’
- Often covered in oil and had cuts filled with tar to increase value
- Branded again by plantation owner
- Sometimes traded repeatedly between plantation owners
What were living and working conditions like on the plantations?
- Some had to build their own homes
- Accomodation only had a few simple items of furniture
- Could be given their own patch of land to grow food and raise animals
- Could work as much as 18 hours a day, often in shift patterns
- Worked in ‘gangs’ based on strength
- Most worked in the fields, but some were domestic servants or worked in the boiler house
How were enslaved people disciplined and punished on the plantations?
- Difficult slaves sent to seasoning camps on arrival
- Some forced to wear iron neck rings
- Groups of slaves could be chained together while working
- Threatened with separation from their family
- Tortured using thumbscrews
- Might be made to wear a ‘scold’s bridle’ to prevent talking
How did enslaved people resist on the plantations?
- Working badly or slowly
- Breaking tools or equipment
- Running away
- Self-harm
- Suicide
- Killing the owner and burning down the plantation
Why was it difficult for enslaved people to rebel on the plantations?
- Fear of punishments
- Too weak or physically tired
- Often watched by white overseers or black slave drivers
- Lacked resources, such as guns
- Often could not speak the same language as each other
- Rewards offered for runaways
What was the case of the Zong?
- British slave ship bound for Jamaica in 1781
- Navigational errors meant it overshot its destination
- Subsequent lack of water on board
- Captain ordered 131 slaves to be thrown overboard, hoping to be able to claim the insurance
- Insurance company refused to pay out and the case went to court
- Court ruled in favour of the ship’s owners but claim never paid out