The barbarity of the enforced migration of Africans to the Caribbean and the realities of the transatlantic slave trade are fully revealed in Letters from the Voyages of the Slave Ship PEARL. The nonchalant accounts of the awful details of suffering and death are brought into sharp relief by the editors who reconstruct four voyages of the PEARL between 1785 and 1793. The ship was owned by Bristol businessman James Rogers, and the letters in this collection are but a small sample of the 15 boxes of correspondence comprising the Rogers papers held at The National Archives at Kew in the United Kingdom. Caribbean scholars who can scarcely access the original records are provided with a closer understanding of the complexities of slave trading. Written from several perspectives - the ship's doctor, the captains, slave traders on the African coast and Caribbean merchants - this assemblage offers a unique glimpse into the transatlantic slave trade. The letters, however, do not cover the perspective of the enslaved - muted and reduced to cargo, mentioned and recorded by number only. The book is divided into four parts for each of the selected voyages and each part is introduced with a short synopsis, each letter elucidated with explanatory notes. The work is enhanced by the inclusion of maps, tables and figures. Letters from the Voyages of the Slave Ship PEARL contextualises the continuing conversation of a painful past and is both enlightening and informative for the scholar, activist, and advocate alike.
Author(s): Audra A. Diptee (editor), David V. Trotman (editor)
Edition: Epub
Publisher: Ian Randle Publishers
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 138
City: Kingston, Jamaica
Tags: Slavery – West Indies, British – History – Sources; Slaves West Indies, British – Social conditions; Slave trade; Economic history – 1750-1918; Pearl (Ship)
List of Maps
List of Tables and Figures
Foreword
Preface
Introduction: Archives, Power & Legacy
The Voyage 1785–1786
The Voyage 1787–1788
The Voyage 1790–1791
The Voyage 1792–1793