Description

Book Synopsis
This book is an examination of the island of St Helena’s involvement in slave trade abolition. After the establishment of a British Vice-Admiralty court there in 1840, this tiny and remote South Atlantic colony became the hub of naval activity in the region. It served as a base for the Royal Navy’s West Africa Squadron, and as such became the principal receiving depot for intercepted slave ships and their human cargo. During the middle decades of the nineteenth century over 25,000 ‘recaptive’ or ‘liberated’ Africans were landed at the island. Here, in embryonic refugee camps, these former slaves lived and died, genuine freedom still a distant prospect.

This book provides an account and evaluation of this episode. It begins by charting the political contexts which drew St Helena into the fray of abolition, and considers how its involvement, at times, came to occupy those at the highest levels of British politics. In the main, however, it focuses on St Helena itself, and examines how matters played out on the ground. The study utilises documentary sources (many previously untouched) which tell the stories of those whose lives became bound up in the compass of anti-slavery, far from London and long after the Abolition Act of 1807. It puts the Black experience at the foreground, aiming to bring a voice to a forgotten people, many of whom died in limbo, in a place that was physically and conceptually between freedom and slavery.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

1. A Place of Immense Advantage

2. London and Jamestown

3. Sailortown

4. Life and death in the depots

5. ‘All, all, without avail’. Medicine and the liberated Africans

6. After ‘liberation’

7. Island Lives

Conclusion

Appendix 1. Slave prize cases tried at Freetown, Luanda, Cape Town and St Helena, 1836–68

Appendix 2. Prizes adjudicated by the Vice-Admiralty court of St Helena

Appendix 3. Liberated African emigration from St Helena

Appendix 4. Emigrant voyages from St Helena

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Distant freedom: St Helena and the abolition of

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A Hardback by Andrew Pearson

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    View other formats and editions of Distant freedom: St Helena and the abolition of by Andrew Pearson

    Publisher: Liverpool University Press
    Publication Date: 31/03/2016
    ISBN13: 9781781382837, 978-1781382837
    ISBN10: 1781382832

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This book is an examination of the island of St Helena’s involvement in slave trade abolition. After the establishment of a British Vice-Admiralty court there in 1840, this tiny and remote South Atlantic colony became the hub of naval activity in the region. It served as a base for the Royal Navy’s West Africa Squadron, and as such became the principal receiving depot for intercepted slave ships and their human cargo. During the middle decades of the nineteenth century over 25,000 ‘recaptive’ or ‘liberated’ Africans were landed at the island. Here, in embryonic refugee camps, these former slaves lived and died, genuine freedom still a distant prospect.

    This book provides an account and evaluation of this episode. It begins by charting the political contexts which drew St Helena into the fray of abolition, and considers how its involvement, at times, came to occupy those at the highest levels of British politics. In the main, however, it focuses on St Helena itself, and examines how matters played out on the ground. The study utilises documentary sources (many previously untouched) which tell the stories of those whose lives became bound up in the compass of anti-slavery, far from London and long after the Abolition Act of 1807. It puts the Black experience at the foreground, aiming to bring a voice to a forgotten people, many of whom died in limbo, in a place that was physically and conceptually between freedom and slavery.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    1. A Place of Immense Advantage

    2. London and Jamestown

    3. Sailortown

    4. Life and death in the depots

    5. ‘All, all, without avail’. Medicine and the liberated Africans

    6. After ‘liberation’

    7. Island Lives

    Conclusion

    Appendix 1. Slave prize cases tried at Freetown, Luanda, Cape Town and St Helena, 1836–68

    Appendix 2. Prizes adjudicated by the Vice-Admiralty court of St Helena

    Appendix 3. Liberated African emigration from St Helena

    Appendix 4. Emigrant voyages from St Helena

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

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