The Memoirs of Captain Hugh Crow: The Life and Times of a Slave Trade Captain

The Memoirs of Captain Hugh Crow: The Life and Times of a Slave Trade Captain

by Bodleian Library (Editor), JohnPinfold (Editor), HughCrow (Author)

Synopsis

Hugh Crow was the captain of a slave-trading vessel which made one of the last legal journeys across the Atlantic with its `human cargo'. This is a highly engaging, rare, first-hand account written by a staunch defender of the slave trade. Crow depicts himself as an enlightened practitioner of the trade, paying close attention to the welfare of his `negroes', which he equates with financial success in his business. Crow's memoirs bring to life the everyday aspects of the slave trade and describe the harsh practicalities of life at sea, where on average a fifth of the crew did not survive the crossing. The narrative is peppered with social comment on the propriety of the slave trade and conditions in West Africa and the Caribbean. At the same time, Crow expresses a warm attachment towards individual slaves which was sometimes reciprocated, most remarkably in a song composed by the slaves about him which is reproduced in this book. The introduction chronicles Hugh Crow's life, his entry into the slave trade and his rise as one of the foremost slave captains of his day. Quoting extensively from original sources, it sets him in the context of the eighteenth-century mercantile community which fought hard to defend itself against the humanitarian campaign to abolish the slave trade. He emerges as a colourful if flawed figure from this highly practical, personal, and eye-opening look at the slave trade.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 198
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Published: 28 May 2007

ISBN 10: 1851243216
ISBN 13: 9781851243211

Media Reviews
On the 200th anniversary of the act of the British Parliament abolishing the slave trade, Oxford University''s Bodleian Library has reprinted 14 pamphlets from its collection of abolition materials. . . . Of particular interest are the two pamphlets taking contradictory positions based on biblical evidence. . . . Recommended. -R. T. Brown, Choice -- R. T. Brown Choice (05/01/2008)
This edition makes available to a wider audience a classic narrative of the slave trade. That Crow's many claims must be treated with utmost caution does not lessen its importance, for that lies in the perspective it gives into a group of men among the most reviled by history for the trade in which they were engaged. --Emma Christopher International History Review