Black Cargoes
by Daniel P Mannix
Synopsis
Africans were brought to North and South America as the result of a gigantic commercial operation that lasted the better part of four centuries; an operation responsible for untold suffering and the deaths of millions of African men, women, and children.
Drawing heavily on journals, state
documents, business ledgers, and memoirs, authors Mannix and Cowley provide a
thorough and formidable review of the slave trade's execrable history ― its
origins, rapid expansion, pinnacle, decline, and eventual abolishment. Black
Cargoes traces in meticulous detail how the business was run, who financed it,
and an explanation of the complex and profitable interactions of merchants and
governments which eventually resulted in the rise of the plantation system, the
maritime trade in New England, and the means to finance the industrial
revolution in England and France. Above all the authors rigorously examine the
forced submission of generations of Africans, slave raids, barracoons and
coffles, the appalling conditions onboard ship for both Africans and seamen.
The inexplicable cruelty of slave traders and their collaboration with African
leaders.
The decades of struggle abolitionists faced with indifferent
politicians, plantation owners, and businessmen who turned their backs on the
anguish of countless victims. While it can be said that Atlantic slave trade
changed the history of the world, it did so at an unspeakable cost –
precipitating the dissolution and disintegration of an entire continent's
societies..
To current generations, facts about
the Atlantic slave trade may hold few surprises. However, at the time of its
publication, Black Cargoes was the first general history of the Atlantic trade
to be written since the turn of the century over 60 years before. Grim
and gripping history, Black Cargoes remains one of the most historically
significant treatise of the Atlantic slave trade of its time.
note: same author of book ”The History of
Torture.” Excellent researchers on issues involving cruelties and injustices.
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