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Middle Passages Institute 2011 University of York Friday | Aug 5 | 2011 Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade in the Americas
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Sale of enslaved Africans aboard the Sarah Bonadventure, Jamaica, 1677
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Source: “Advertisement for Slave Sale, 18 th cent.”; Image Reference NW0328, as shown on www.slaveryimages.org, sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia Library. Slaves for Sale in Charleston, South Carolina, 1784 TSTD Voyage ID: 25396
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TSTD Voyage ID 30968 (see also 30910, 30941) View of Cap Francais, St. Domingue (Haiti) and slave ship. Shows purchase of slaves aft on the main deck, an iron barrier separating them from the quarter-deck, and Europeans apparently having a picnic on the stern; also cross- section of ship's hull with storage quarters. Caption on illustration reads: "Vue du Cap Francais et du n[avi]re la Marie Seraphique de Nantes, Capitaine Gaugy, le jour de l'ouverture de sa vente, troisieme voyage d'Angole, 1772,1773" [View of Cap Francais and the Marie Seraphique of Nantes/Captain Gaugy/the day of the opening of its [slave] sale [after] its third voyage from Angola, 1772, 1773]. Source: “French Slave Ship, La Marie- Séraphique, Saint Domingue (Haiti), 1773”; Image Reference EO30, as shown on www.slaveryimages.org, sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia Library
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Source: “Newly Arrived Enslaved Africans, Surinam, 1770s”; Image Reference NW0265, as shown on www.slaveryimages.org, sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia Library.
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