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Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery: Local Nuances of a ‘National Sin’ PDF

290 Pages·2016·2.446 MB·English
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Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery LiverpooL StudieS in internationaL SLavery, 11 Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery Local Nuances of a ‘National Sin’ Edited by Katie Donington, Ryan Hanley and Jessica Moody Britain’s History and Memory of transatlantic Slavery Liverpool university press First published 2016 by Liverpool university press 4 Cambridge Street Liverpool L69 7Zu Copyright © 2016 Liverpool university press The right of Katie donington, ryan Hanley and Jessica Moody to be identified as the editors of this book has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, designs and patents act 1988. all rights reserved. no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing-in-publication data a British Library Cip record is available print iSBn 978-1-78138-277-6 cased epdf iSBn 978-1-78138-355-1 typeset by Carnegie Book production, Lancaster Contents Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgements ix Contributors xi introduction Katie Donington, Ryan Hanley and Jessica Moody 1 Part I Little Britain’s History of Slavery 1 From Guinea to Guernsey and Cornwall to the Caribbean: recovering the History of Slavery in the Western english Channel Brycchan Carey 21 2 ‘There to sing the song of Moses’: John Jea’s Methodism and Working-Class attitudes to Slavery in Liverpool and portsmouth, 1801–1817 Ryan Hanley 39 3 portrait of a Slave-trading Family: The Staniforths of Liverpool Jane Longmore 60 4 Forgotten Women: anna eliza elletson and absentee Slave ownership Hannah Young 83 5 east Meets West: exploring the Connections between Britain, the Caribbean and the east india Company, c. 1757–1857 Chris Jeppesen 102 • v • Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery Part II: Little Britain’s Memory of Slavery 6 Whose Memories? edward Long and the Work of re-remembering Catherine Hall 129 7 Liverpool’s Local tints: drowning Memory and ‘Maritimising’ Slavery in a Seaport City Jessica Moody 150 8 Local roots/Global routes: Slavery, Memory and identity in Hackney Katie Donington 172 9 Multidirectional Memory, Many-Headed Hydras and Glasgow Michael Morris 195 10 Making Museum narratives of Slavery and anti-Slavery in olney Leanne Munroe 216 afterword John Oldfield 237 Selected Bibliography 247 Index 261 • vi • List of Illustrations List of illustrations Colour Image 1.1: oil portrait of ann de Lisle de Beauvoir, with young servant; circle of Henri Gascars, c. 1669. Image 3.1: portrait of Thomas Staniforth, 1769, by Joseph Wright of derby (1734–1797). Image 3.3: portrait of Charles Goore (1701–1783) by Joseph Wright of derby, c. 1769. Image 9.1: panel from the Great tapestry of Scotland showing the Glasgow tobacco Lords. Black-and-White Image 3.2: darnall Hall, near Sheffield. 62 Image 3.4: Liverpool old dock, 1770. 65 Image 3.5: Thomas Staniforth’s house in ranelagh Street, W. G. Herdman, 1867. 68 Image 3.6: diagram of the stowage plan for the slave ship Brookes, 1788. 73 Image 6.1: plan of Lucky valley estate, Clarendon, Jamaica, 1769, by James Blair. 135 • vii • Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery Image 7.1: Goree warehouses engraving, 1826 copy. 163 Image 7.2: piazza sculpture plaque. 168 Image 7.3: piazza Waterfall sculpture with Wilberforce House in the background. 169 Image 8.1: Joanna vassa’s grave in abney park Cemetery, Hackney. 179 Image 8.2: Thomas King Entering London Dock 1822–1827, William John Huggins. 184 Image 8.3: portrait of Samuel Boddington by William drummond c. 1835. 187 Image 8.4: poster advertising Joseph Jackson Fuller’s preaching at Salem Chapel. 192 Image 10.1: The slave ship model at the Cowper and newton Museum, olney. 235 • viii • Acknowledgements acknowledgements This book has developed through a series of conference events. initial ideas arose following Katie and Jessica’s participation in a section of the american association of Geographers conference on ‘Slavery and Memory’ in new york in 2012 organised by derek H. alderman and e. arnold Modlin. The event generated a number of questions for us on the relationship between slavery and the geographies of memory in Britain. as a result, joined by ryan, we decided to convene the conference ‘Little Britain’s Memory of Slavery: The Local nuances of a national Sin,’ which took place at university College London on 13–14 September 2013. The conference was a joint initiative between the Humanities research Centre at the university of york, the Wilberforce institute for the Study of Slavery and emanci- pation at the university of Hull and the Legacies of British Slave-Ownership project at university College London. it was generously supported by those three institutions, english Heritage and the economic History Society. The conference brought together academics, public historians, museum and archive professionals, genealogists, artists and campaigners to think through the ways in which slavery has been remembered, commemorated, memori- alised and represented in different parts of Britain. We would like to thank all those who took part as speakers or attendees. The conversations that began during that meeting are threaded through this book. We have been supported throughout the publication process by Liverpool university press and would like to thank editorial director alison Welsby for all her help, and patience, in producing the volume. We would like to thank the anonymous reader at Lup for their invaluable comments on the various chapters presented here. Finally, we are also very grateful to the Ludwig fund at new College, oxford for financial support in reproducing the colour images featured in this volume. Kd, rH and JM • ix •

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