Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Disease


Slaves captured or purchased in the African interior were often held in confinement for months before they finally arrived at the coast. Some of these people had been wounded in battles, and others like the European sailors, often caught these ailments. John Taylor, the captain of the Henrietta Marie's second voyage, was not spared the threat of disease and was ill or dying before the ship left Africa, re-exposed to smallpox, yellow fever, and other deadly diseases.The mortality rate during the Middle Passage was high for slaves and crew alike, averaging between thirteen and thirtythree percent. The likelihood of contagion, however was strongest for the Africans.

Common hazards of the voyage, stemming from no other source than poor diet and close confinement, included scurvy and gangrene. Dehydration, caused by lack of drinking water and high loss of bodily fluids from fevers or dysentery, was a primary killer aboard the slaving vessels. Symptoms included melancholy and a loss of appetite, but were not understood by early ship's physicians, and often went untreated until it was too late. In Addition, contaminated water supplies produced a variety of gastrointestinal disorders which increased fatalities.

History: During the Middle Passage.


By 1654, some 8,000 to10,000 Africans each year were undergoing the Middle Passage. During the next hundred years, this number grew steadily, reaching its peak sometime around 1750, when the annual number stabilized at 60,000 to70,000. Estimates on the total number of Africans who were forced to undergo the Middle Passage generally ranged from nine to fifteen million. Out of this number, some 3 to 5 million perished before they even reached the Americas.

By the end of January, 1700, the Henrietta Marie took some twelve hundred enslaved Africans aboard the Middle Passage to the New World. The men, women and children were shackled and confined to the stifling cargo holds below deck. After securing her cargo, the Henrietta Marie would have brought food and water aboard for the long voyage to the West Indies known as the Middle Passage.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Insurance on Slave Ships: The Zong Claim


Owners of slave ships took out insurance on the ships which covered the ship and the cargo on the ship which included the slaves. Before a slave ship set sail its owners would be sure to acquire insurance on it so that if something happened and the ship did not successfully return they would be able to receive the money they invested in the ship.

Under the Command of Luke Collingwood The Zong began its voyage to Jamaica on September 6, 1781. The conditions on this slave ship were much like the conditions on slave ships, forcing the slaves to be tightly packed together, and resulted in disease and malnutrition. By November 29th seven white men and 60 slaves had died. Collingwood began to worry about the future of their voyage and the affect that disease would have it. According to Law about insurance on slaves:

"The insurer takes upon him the risk of the loss, capture, and death of slaves, or any other unavoidable accident to them: but natural death is always understood to be excepted: by natural death is mean't, not only when it happens by disease or sickness, but also when the captive destroys himself through despair, which often happens: but when slaves are killed, or thrown into the sea in order to quell an insurrection on their part, then the insurers must answer."

Knowing this Collingwood decided it would be best to throw the slaves overboard and simply collect the insurance on them as opposed to having more of them die of natural reasons and having to accept a loss on them. His decision wasn't a wonderful one since the ship was not under any danger. According to the law the ship would only be covered by the insurance if the ships were thrown overboard in the face of danger to the ship. As a result when the owners of the ship went to claim their insurance of the slaves the insurers refused them. The owners made a claim that the slaves were thrown overboard due to depletion of water supplies, but the insurers found out this was not true, and refused the claim.

http://www.hullwebs.co.uk/content/j-georgians/people/william-wilberforce/slaveship-zong.htm
http://www.umich.edu/~ece/student_projects/slavery/the_zong.html

Thursday, April 10, 2008

"Eye Witness to History" Aboard a Slave Ship.


"The first object that struck us was an enormous gun, turning on a swivel, on deck, the constant appendage of a pirate; and the next were large kettles for cooking, on the bows, the usual apparatus of a slaver. Our boat was now hoisted out, and I went on board with the officers. When we mounted her decks we found her full of slaves. She was called the "Feloz", commanded by Captain Jose' Barbosa, bound to Bahia. She was a very broad-decked ship, with a mainmast, schooner rigged, and behind her foremast was that large, formidable gun, which turned on a broad circle of iron, on deck, and which enabled her to act as a pirate if her slaving speculation failed. She had taken in, on the coast of Africa, 336 males and 226 females, making in all 562, and had been out seventeen days, during which she had thrown overboard 55. The slaves were all inclosed under grated hatchways between decks. The space was so low that they sat between each other's legs and were stowed so close together that there was no possibility of their lying down or at all changing their position by night or day.

As they belonged to and were shipped on account of different individuals, they were all branded like sheep with the owner's marks of different forms. These were impressed under their breasts or on their arms, and, as the mate informed me with perfect indifference 'burnt with the red-hot iron.' Over the hatchway stood a ferocious-looking fellow with a scourge of many twisted thongs in his hand, who was the slave driver of the ship, and whenever he heard the slightest noise below, he shook it over them and seemed eager to exercise it. I was quite pleased to take this hateful badge out of his hand, and I have kept it ever since as a horrid memorial of reality, should I ever be disposed to forget the scene I witnessed.

As soon as the poor creatures saw us looking down at them, their dark and melancholy visages brightened up. They perceived something of sympathy and kindness in our looks which they had not been accustomed to, and, feeling instinctively that we were friends, they immediately began to shout and clap their hands. One or two had picked up a few Portuguese words, and cried out, "Viva! Viva!" The women were particularly excited. They all held up their arms, and when we bent down and shook hands with them, they could not contain their delight; they endeavored to scramble up on their knees, stretching up to kiss our hands, and we understood that they knew we had come to liberate them. Some, however, hung down their heads in apparently hopeless dejection; some were greatly emaciated, and some, particularly children, seemed dying.

But the circumstance which struck us most forcibly was how it was possible for such a number of human beings to exist, packed up and wedged together as tight as they could cram, in low cells three feet high, the greater part of which, except that immediately under the grated hatchways, was shut out from light or air, and this when the thermometer, exposed to the open sky, was standing in the shade, on our deck, at 89'. The space between decks was divided into two compartments 3 feet 3 inches high; the size of one was 16 feet by 18 and of the other 40 by 21; into the first compartment were crammed the women and girls, into the second, the men and boys: 226 fellow creatures were thus thrust into one space 288 feet square and 336 into another space 800 feet square, giving to the whole an average of 23 inches and to each of the women not more than 13 inches. We also found manacles and fetters of different kinds, but it appears that they had all been taken off before we boarded.

The heat of these horrid places was so great and the odor so offensive that it was quite impossible to enter them, even had there been room. They were measured as above when the slaves had left them. The officers insisted that the poor suffering creatures should be admitted on deck to get air and water. This was opposed by the mate of the slaver, who, from a feeling that they deserved it, declared they would murder them all. The officers, however, persisted, and the poor beings were all turned up together. It is impossible to conceive the effect of this eruption - 517 fellow creatures of all ages and sexes, some children, some adults, some old men and women, all in a state of total nudity, scrambling out together to taste the luxury of a little fresh air and water. They came swarming up like bees from the aperture of a hive till the whole deck was crowded to suffocation front stem to stern, so that it was impossible to imagine where they could all have come from or how they could have been stowed away.


On looking into the places where they had been crammed, there we found some children next to the sides of the ship, in the places most remote from light and air; they were lying nearly in a torpid state after the rest had turned out. The little creatures seemed indifferent as to life or death, and when they were carried on deck, many of them could not stand. After enjoying for a short time the unusual luxury of air, some water was brought; it was then that the extent of their sufferings was exposed in a fearful manner. They all rushed like maniacs towards it. No entreaties or threats or blows could restrain them; they shrieked,struggled and fought with one another for a drop of this precious liquid, as if they grew rabid at the sight of it.

It was not surprising that they had endured much sickness and loss of life in their short passage. They had sailed from the coast of Africa on the 7th of May, and had been out for seventeen days, during this period of time, they had thrown overboard no less than fifty-five slaves, who had died of dysentery and other complaints in that space of time, though they had left the coast in good health. Indeed, many of the survivors were seen lying about the decks in the last stage of emaciation and in a state of filth and misery not to be looked at. Even-handed justice had visited the effects of this unholy traffic on the crew who were engaged in it. Eight or nine had died, and at that moment six were in hammocks on board, in different stages of fever. This mortality did not arise from want of medicine. There was a large stock ostentatiously displayed in the cabin, with a manuscript book containing directions as to the quantities; but the only medical man on board to prescribe it was a black, who was as ignorant as his patients.

While expressing my horror at what I saw and exclaiming against the state of this vessel for conveying human beings, I was informed by my friends, who had passed so long a time on the coast of Africa and visited so many ships, that this was one of the best they had seen. The height sometimes between decks was only eighteen inches, so that the unfortunate beings could not turn round or even on their sides, the elevation being less than the breadth of their shoulders; and here they are usually chained to the decks by the neck and legs. In such a place the sense of misery and suffocation is so great that the Negroes, like the English in the Black Hole at Calcutta, are driven to a frenzy.

They had on one occasion taken a slave vessel in the river Bonny; the slaves were stowed in the narrow space between decks and chained together. They heard a horrible din and tumult among them and could not imagine from what cause it proceeded. They opened the hatches and turned them up on deck. They were manacled together in twos and threes. Their horror may be well conceived when they found a number of them in different stages of suffocation; many of them were foaming at the mouth and in the last agonies-many were dead. A living man was sometimes dragged up, and his companion was a dead body; sometimes of the three attached to the same chain, one was dying and another dead. The tumult they had heard was the frenzy of those suffocating wretches in the last stage of fury and desperation, struggling to extricate themselves. When they were all dragged up, nineteen were irrecoverably dead. Many destroyed one another in the hopes of procuring room to breathe; men strangled those next them, and women drove nails into each other's brains. Many unfortunate creatures on other occasions took the first opportunity of leaping overboard and getting rid, in this way, of an intolerable life."

References: Walsh, Robert, Notices of Brazil in 1828 and 1829 (1831).
"Aboard a Slave Ship, 1829," EyeWitness to History,
www.eyewitnesstohistory.com(2000
).

Monday, April 7, 2008

Brutal Captains,Violent Crews" How the Slave Trade Worked".


"Slave ship crews were often the dregs of the seafaring community". Some were dragooned into service when drunk, or were forced to sign up for a slaving voyage after being encouraged to run up debts with a port pub keeper in league with a slave ship officer. They were a rough and surly lot, who often fought their officers and suffered brutal whippings in return. If a sailor remained disobedient, his captain handed him over to the nearest Royal Navy ship, where iron discipline was guaranteed to break any rebel spirit. The amount of recorded violence between slave ship officers and men gives us an idea of the violence that would have been unleashed on the chained slaves below decks.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/abolition/map/index.shtml#

Extreme Human Degradation that Characterized the Middle Passage


Because so much of the slave trade was done illegally it is difficult to estimate the actual numbers of Africans who were shipped as slaves on European vessels. The Middle Passage was at best a voyage that was very unpleasant and dehumanising. At its worst it was an ordeal that led to a slow and painful death.

European ships were loaded with groups of six people chained together with neck and foot shackles. On board, they were put below the decks, placed head to foot, still chained in long rows. Some historians estimate that for every ton of cargo there were four slaves transported. Conditions below deck were horrendous: crowded cargo holds where the air circulation was very bad, unbearable heat, and a chronic lack of adequate supplies of food and water. Most Africans suffered from seasickness and vomited often. The poor food led to widespread diarrhea and these conditions led to the outbreak of diseases like typhoid fever, measles, yellow fever, and smallpox.

The unhealthy conditions were made worse by the common practice of overcrowding a ship in order to maximise profit. The longer the ship was at sea the higher the slave mortality rate. There was never any question that Africans would die during a voyage, only how many. Short voyages, like the run to São Tomé from Benin, could expect a 5 to 10 per cent mortality rate. Longer voyages, like the run to Lisbon from São Tomé might be 30 per cent or higher. Those that survived the voyage were usually reduced to skeletons and many would die from neglect while awaiting customs clearance and sale.

The extreme human degradation that characterised the Middle Passage left many Africans to suffer severe psychological shock. This was compounded by a common fear among the Africans that they had been taken by the Europeans to be eaten, to be made into oil or gunpowder, or that their blood was to be used to dye the red flags of Spanish ships. In fact it was their skill as agricultural laborers, and their adaptability to tropical climates, that were sorely needed in the agricultural economy of the European colonies, an economy based upon the plantation system.

Conditions on the Slave Ships


The ship that carried the Africans across the Atlantic was the Teçora, a slave ship sailing under a Portuguese flag, bound for Cuba. The ship was a brig, specially built for the slave trade, with a narrow, clipper-shaped hull and a sharp bow built for maneuverability and above all speed, to evade British anti-slave trade patrols.

The voyage the "Middle Passage" across the Atlantic took two months. After weeks or months of waiting in the baracoons at the river mouth, embarkment happened in a sudden rush: the slaves were herded out of the baracoons, marched to the water's edge and forced into large wooden canoes to be ferried out to the slave ship looming beyond the surf. The European slavers and their African workers, members of a coastal tribe, the Kru, worked rapidly; if a British cruiser suddenly appeared on the horizon, the venture was lost and the slaves likely thrown into the surf to drown.

In a series of wrenching dislocations, this must have been most terrifying. None of the captives had ever been to sea before, in all likelihood. Many, convinced they were going to be killed and eaten by their captors, tried to plunge into the surf and drown themselves; slavers and Kru men had learned to watch carefully for that.Once loaded, the slave ship quickly weighed anchor and sailed off. Land -- Africa -- would have dropped out of sight within a few hours, if any of the slaves were on deck to see it. The Middle Passage had begun.

The slaves were packed into a dark, stooped space called the slave deck, about four feet high, built below the main deck, above the hold. In the testimony later given by the Amistad Africans about this nightmare voyage, the most vivid aspect of the experience was the cramped waiting, tossing in the waves, in suffocating, fetid darkness. Periodically they were brought up on deck and fed rice. If some of the captives tried to starve themselves, as often happened, they were whipped and forced to eat. Few managed to starve, but over the two months they were at sea, water supplies ran low, and disease spread through the close-packed, unventilated slave deck. By the time theTeçora had crossed the Atlantic, a third of the Africans had died.

http://amistad.mysticseaport.org/discovery/story/middle.passage.html

"Slavery... I didn't know about all these forms that existed. I think it's largely because we aren't expecting it. It is hidden. Generally people would not believe that it is possible under modern conditions. They would say 'No, I think you are making it all up', because it's just too incredible..."

(Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Hull, UK, 1999)

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

The Slaves Diet While on The Ship


Since food could potentially take up a great deal of room on a ship, captains were careful about the food they brought. They wanted to squeeze as many slaves as they possibly could, into the smallest space possible, so they were sure not to take up too much space with food.

A daily ration of food commonly included the following:
*yams
*a biscuit
*beans
*flour and salted beef

Sometimes slaves would be forced to take a sip of lime juice or vinegar to help avoid scurvy.
Water caskets that were necessary for long voyages took up a great deal of space and were often limited to the smallest size possible. This forced many slaves to spend their time dehydrated, as well as the fact that they were sailing close to the equator in tightly packed ships.

http://www.mariner.org/captivepassage/middlepassage/mid007.html

Friday, March 28, 2008

Olaudah Equiano


Olaudah Equiano was the 11 year old son of an African tribal leader who was kidnapped in 1755 from Nigeria.The following is an African chant mourning the loss of Equiano:

"Who are we looking for, who are we looking for?
It's Equiano we're looking for.
Has he gone to the stream? Let him come back.
Has he gone to the farm? Let him return.
It's Equiano we're looking for."

Olaudah was one of twelve million Africans in South America who were taken and sold into slavery. He was one of the most prominent black campaigners in the anti-slavery campaign. He was an ex-slave who, by the 1780s' lived as a free man in London. He is mostly remembered for his 1789 autobiography. It tells of his kidnapping in Nigeria, being sold into slavery, His journey to the West Indies, his life as a slave and his struggle to buy his freedom. In his autobiography he describes his voyage on a slave ship. The following is a brief summary of his experience.


"Let it suffice to say, that I was lost to my dear indulgent parents and relations, and they to me. All my help was cries and tears, and these could not avail; nor suffered long, till one succeeding woe, and dread, swelled up another". Brought from a state of innocence and freedom, and, in a barbarous cruel manner, conveyed to a state of horror and slavery... The grievous thoughts which I then felt, still pant in my heart; though my fears and tears have long subsided, yet it is still grievous to think that thousands more have suffered in similar and greater distress.

"Being in this dreadful captivity and horrible slavery, without any hope of deliverance... beholding the most dreadful scenes of misery and cruelty, and seeing my miserable companions often cruelly lashed, and cut to pieces, for the most trifling of faults; this made me often tremble and weep... For eating a piece of sugarcane, some were cruelly lashed, or struck over the face to knock their teeth out."

When I was forced to the lower deck, I was greeted by the worst stench I had ever experienced in my life. This stench combined with the sound of other crys, made me lose my appetite while on board. It made me wish for death, suddenly it seemed as though death was a friend to me and I welcomed it. Soon after I was brought aboard the ship, two white men offered me some food, and when I declined to eat it, they grabbed me by my hands, laid me down, tied me up and flogged me severely.


I will never forget "The shrieks of the women, and the groans of the dying, that rendered the whole scene of horror almost inconceivable... I expected every hour to share the fate of my companions, some of whom were almost daily brought upon deck at the point of death, which I began to hope would soon put an end to my miseries. Often did I think many of the inhabitants of the deep sea were much more happy than myself. I envied them, the freedom they enjoyed, and often wished I could change my condition for theirs. Every circumstance I met with, served only to render my state more painful, and heighten my apprehensions, and my opinion of the cruelty of the whites".

There were other men during this journey that were whipped hourly due to their refusal to eat. Their refusal to eat was one more attempt made by Africans to kill themselves to avoid spending anymore time on the ship. Olaudah, who was not used to the water and feared it, contemplated jumping overboard to his death many times during his journey. However, he was never able to do so, because he was watched too closely by guards.


http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ism/slavery/equiano_aboard.asp
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/1narr4.html

General Conditions


Most ships took 60 to 90 days to cross the Atlantic, but it could take longer depending on the weather. The conditions the slaves where forced to endure while on this never-ending voyages where horrific. They were treated like cattle, even branded with their owner's marks under their breast on or their arms at times. They were forced to lay between the decks, often so close that they touched one another, and lay beside each other in a spoon like fashion. The slaves were so close together that they sometimes laid in each other's feces, urine, or even blood. There was very little air that was allowed to these lower decks. The lack of airflow combined with the scorching hot temperatures at these lower decks to create a horrible stench. This also allowed diseases such as smallpox and yellow fever to spread rampantly among the slaves.

While aboard the ships women were often sexually abused. On one ship, captained by John Newton, a female slave who was visibly pregnant was seduced into a room and raped with brutelike force. To ensure that man were well behaved, they were shackled together at their wrists and ankles. If anyone did misbehave they were punished with whips and iron muzzles.

http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/slaveship.htm
http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ism/slavery/newton_aboard.asp
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/1narr4.html

General Conditions


When slave ships crossed the Atlantic it generally took 60 to 90 days, however depending on the weather, it could take longer. When the slaves were on these ships they were treated horrifically, like animals. They were often packed into spaces that left them little room to move. They often had to lay in a spoon like fashion pressed up to the people beside them. They were forced to lay so close that often times they would lay in each other's feces, urine, and sometimes blood and they were often nude. This constant closeness made diseases like smallpox and yellow fever spread rampantly.

The stench aboard the ships was normally horrible. The decks of the ships that held the slaves often had very little airflow and was incredibly hot, often making the stench unbearable. The men were shackled together by the wrist and ankle, and the women were often sexually abused. Aboard a ship that was captained by John Newton, one of the men seduced a slave woman who was visibly pregnant, to the lower deck and took advantage of her with brute like force. If slaves misbehaved they would be punished with iron muzzles and whips.