James DeWolf and the Rhode Island Slave Trade

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Over thirty thousand slaves were brought to the shores of colonial America on ships owned and captained by James DeWolf. When the United States took action to abolish slavery, this Bristol native manipulated the legal system and became actively involved in Rhode Island politics in order to pursue his trading ventures. He served as a member of the House of Representatives in the state of Rhode Island and as a United States senator, all while continuing the slave trade years after passage of the Federal Slave Trade Act of 1808. DeWolf's political power and central role in sustaining the state's economy allowed him to evade prosecution from local and federal authorities—even on counts of murder. Through archival records, author Cynthia Mestad Johnson uncovers the secrets of James DeWolf and tells an unsettling story of corruption and exploitation in the Ocean State from slave ships to politics.

Author(s): Cynthia Mestad Johnson
Edition: e-book
Publisher: The History Press
Year: 2014

Language: English
Pages: 160
City: Charleston, South Carolina
Tags: History, Sociology, Nonfiction, HIS000000, SOC000000

Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Murder on the High Seas
2. The Golden Rock
3. Laws and Economics
4. The Pious Brother
5. DeWolf’s Nemesis
6. Indians and Kidnapping
7. Politics
8. Slave Trade Accelerates
9. Frustration with the Law
10. Slaves and Cuba
Epilogue. The Demise of a Slave Trader
Appendix. Slave Trade Laws
Notes
Bibliography
About the Author