UPDATED ON:
Monday, March 26, 2007
19:58 Mecca time, 16:58 GMT
 
News Europe
Liverpool bears marks of slavery
 By Nick Clark in Liverpool

Even buildings constructed years after abolition celebrate an ignominious past [Al Jazeera]

More than 25,000 Africans are estimated to have passed through Britain's ports on their way to bonded labour during the 17th and 18th century.
 
The practice was finally outlawed in the UK in 1807, after vigorous campaigning by one politician. But even 200 years later the port of Liverpool still bears traces of the trade that made the city rich.
Now just the Mersey ferry chugs a lonely passage where once fleets of slave ships rode at anchor.

Eric Lynch, a tour guide and himself a descendant of slaves, explained how the city, the country and indeed the British Empire was built on the backbone of captured humanity.

 

Modern slavery

Al Jazeera looks at slavery in the 21st century:

  • Zambian: 'I was a captive choirboy'

  • Agents fleece Bangladeshi migrants

Even buildings constructed more than a hundred years after abolition still celebrated an ignominious past, he said.

 

Lynch said: "The buildings were built depicting what made Liverpool rich. They said blacks were worthless. I hope these are kept forever, so people will always remember."

 

Trade triangle

 

It was a triangle of trade - ships left Liverpool laden with commodities like weapons, pottery and gin.

 

These they exchanged in Africa for a human cargo which was then transported to the Americas in appalling conditions and those who survived, sold into enslavement.

 

Rum, sugar and spices took their place in the hold and the ships returned to Britain.

 

Penny Lane, a street made famous by the Beatles in the sixties, is thought to be named after James Penny, a slave trader honoured by the city of Liverpool for his dedication to the slave trade.

 

Ships from Liverpool would arrive in Africa to
collect their human cargo [Al Jazeera]
The valuable piece of silver plate he was given now stands in the city's International Slavery Museum.

 

At the height of the trade British ships carried an estimated 2.7 million Africans to the Americas to work in the plantations, the mines and the households of European settlers.

 

Angela Robinson, curator of the International Slavery Museum, said: "It's important people remember what happened."

 

Britain finally outlawed the slave trade in 1807. The efforts of William Wilberforce, the member of parliament who made it all possible, have been transformed into a major feature film.

 Source: Al Jazeera
 
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