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Underground Railroad - JOURNEY TO SLAVERY

This painting—by S. Hutchinson—depicts slave-trading in action.  Currently maintained by the National Maritime Museum (in London, England), this watercolor - c. 1793 - is entitled "Slave Traffic."

 

After the collapse of the Roman Empire, systematic slavery was virtually non-existent until it was reintroduced as a source of labor for the “New World.” The story of how African men, women and children were first captured, then shipped out as slaves for the colonial world, is appalling. Thanks to the Library of Congress, we can view surviving drawings and pictures of those disturbing times.

What they endured aboard ship, as they sailed to the Americas, was no less horrific:

  • Captured Africans, crammed into ships, suffered a difficult Atlantic crossing.

  • Captain John Kimber, whip in hand, watched as a slave-ship sailor suspended a 15-year-old African girl by her ankle.

Arriving in an unfamiliar country, where people did not speak their language, captured Africans were bought and sold at auction. Such was expected in the world of chattel slavery.

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Author: Carole D. Bos, J.D. 5199stories and lessons created

Original Release: Jul 01, 2003

Updated Last Revision: Jul 15, 2019


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"JOURNEY TO SLAVERY" AwesomeStories.com. Jul 01, 2003. Apr 20, 2024.
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