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1. Objective: To examine the conditions faced by African slaves during the Middle Passage. 'Inventory of Negroes, Cattle, Horses, etc on the estate of.

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Presentation on theme: "1. Objective: To examine the conditions faced by African slaves during the Middle Passage. 'Inventory of Negroes, Cattle, Horses, etc on the estate of."— Presentation transcript:

1 1. Objective: To examine the conditions faced by African slaves during the Middle Passage.
'Inventory of Negroes, Cattle, Horses, etc on the estate of Sir James Lowther Bart in Barbados taken this 31st day of December 1766'

2 2. The Arrival of Europeans in Africa - 1795
The Portuguese, under the sponsorship of Prince Henry, had landed in West Africa 350 years earlier.

3 3.

4 4. This engraving, entitled An African man being inspected for sale into slavery while a white man talks with African slave traders, appeared in the detailed account of a former slave ship captain and was published in 1854.

5 5. Middle Passage – passage across the Atlantic Ocean from West Africa to the Americas that was the route of the African American slave trade

6 6. What happened to each of the women above, and why did it happen?
“The men who fastened irons on the mothers took the children out of their hands and threw them over the side of the ship into the water. Two of the women leaped overboard after the children…One of the two women…was carried down by the weight of her irons before she could be rescued; but the other was taken up by some men in a boat and brought on board. This woman threw herself overboard one night when we were at sea.” Source: The African American Experience. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Globe Book Company, 6. What happened to each of the women above, and why did it happen? One woman drowned trying to save her baby after it was thrown overboard. The other woman, who had also jumped overboard to save her baby, was rescued. However, she later jumped overboard again, committing suicide.

7 7. The slave ship Brookes with 482 people packed onto the decks
7. The slave ship Brookes with 482 people packed onto the decks. The drawing of the slave ship Brookes was distributed by the Abolitionist Society in England as part of their campaign against the slave trade, and dates from 1789.

8 8. The slave ship Brookes with 482 people packed onto the decks
8. The slave ship Brookes with 482 people packed onto the decks. The drawing of the slave ship Brookes was distributed by the Abolitionist Society in England as part of their campaign against the slave trade, and dates from 1789.

9 Image Courtesy of the New Haven Museum Photographic Archives
9. Interior of a Slave Ship, a woodcut illustration from the publication, A History of the Amistad Captives, reveals how hundreds of slaves could be held within a slave ship. Tightly packed and confined in an area with just barely enough room to sit up, slaves were known to die from a lack of breathable air.

10 10. Africans were crowded and chained cruelly aboard slave ships.

11 11. "...the excessive heat was not the only thing that rendered their situation intolerable. The deck, that is the floor of their rooms, was so covered with the blood and mucus which had proceeded from them in consequence of the flux, that it resembled a slaughterhouse." Taken from Alexander Falconbridge, a surgeon aboard slave ships and later the governor of a British colony for freed slaves in Sierra Leone.

12 12.

13 13. "Exercise being deemed necessary for the preservation of their health they are sometimes obliged to dance when the weather will permit their coming on deck. If they go about it reluctantly or do not move with agility, they are flogged; a person standing by them all the time with a cat- o'- nine- tails in his hands for the purpose." Taken from Alexander Falconbridge, An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa.

14 14

15 15. Heading for Jamaica in 1781, the ship Zong was nearing the end of its voyage. It had been twelve weeks since it had sailed from the west African coast with its cargo of 417 slaves. Water was running out. Then, compounding the problem, there was an outbreak of disease. The ship's captain, reasoning that the slaves were going to die anyway, made a decision. In order to reduce the owner's losses, he would throw overboard the slaves thought to be too sick to recover. The voyage was insured, but the insurance would not pay for sick slaves or even those killed by illness. However, it would cover slaves lost through drowning. The captain gave the order; 54 Africans were chained together, then thrown overboard. Another 78 were drowned over the next two days. By the time the ship had reached the Caribbean, 132 persons had been murdered.

16 16. Hear a BBC dramatization of Olaudah Equiano's account of his experiences

17 17. "I was soon put down under the decks, and there I received such a salutation in my nostrils as I had never experienced in my life: so that, with the loathsomeness of the stench, and crying together, I became so sick and low that I was not able to eat, nor had I the least desire to taste anything. I now wished for the last friend, death, to relieve me; but soon, to my grief, two of the white men offered me eatables; and on my refusing to eat, one of them held me fast by the hands and laid me across I think the windlass, and tied my feet, while the other flogged me severely.” - Olaudah Equiano, giving the first eyewitness account of life on a ship from a slave's point of view.

18 18. African Slave Trade (3:10)

19 19. THIS is the Vessel that had the Small-Pox on Board at the Time of her Arrival the 31st of March last: Every necessary Precaution hath since been taken to cleanse both Ship and Cargo thoroughly, so that those who may be inclined to purchase need not be under the least Apprehension of Danger from Infliction. The NEGROES are allowed to be the likeliest Parcel that have been imported this Season.

20 Diseases, such as dysentery, malaria, and smallpox killed thousands of Africans.
From 13% - 20% of the Africans aboard slave ships died during the Middle Passage. Between 1699 and 1845 there were 55 successful African uprisings on slave ships.

21 21. Thomas Phillips, a slave-ship captain, wrote an account of his activities in A Journal of a Voyage (1746): "I have been informed that some commanders have cut off the legs or arms of the most willful slaves, to terrify the rest, for they believe that, if they lose a member, they cannot return home again: I was advised by some of my officers to do the same, but I could not be persuaded to entertain the least thought of it, much less to put in practice such barbarity and cruelty to poor creatures who, excepting their want of Christianity and true religion (their misfortune more than fault), are as much the works of God's hands, and no doubt as dear to him as ourselves."

22 See for yourself what we have to offer. Visit us at www.MrBerlin.com.
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