The Transatlantic Slave Trade: Crash Course Black American History #1
Summary
TLDRIn this Crash Course episode, Clint Smith delves into the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, a 400-year-long tragedy that forcibly displaced millions of Africans. Highlighting the Middle Passage's horrors, Smith discusses the conditions, resistance, and the trade's global impact. He emphasizes the importance of understanding the narratives of the enslaved to grasp the full scope of this dark chapter in history.
Takeaways
- 🌍 The Trans-Atlantic slave trade lasted nearly 400 years, from the late 15th to the late 19th century.
- 📚 W.E.B. Du Bois described the Atlantic slave trade as 'the most magnificent drama in the last thousand years of human history,' highlighting its devastating impact.
- 🚢 An estimated 12.4 million enslaved Africans were transported through the Middle Passage, which was part of the triangular trade system.
- 📈 The Middle Passage had a high mortality rate, with approximately 2 million African captives dying during the journey.
- 🌐 Only about 5% of captured Africans were brought directly to what would become the United States; the majority were sent to Brazil and other parts of the Caribbean and South America.
- 📖 Personal narratives, such as Olaudah Equiano's autobiography, provide firsthand accounts of the horrors and experiences of the enslaved.
- 🔄 Many captured Africans were prisoners of war, criminals, or poor members of society, often traded by other Africans for goods.
- 🚫 The conditions on slave ships were inhumane, with overcrowding, lack of sanitation, and rampant disease leading to a high death toll.
- 💪 Enslaved Africans resisted their captors in various ways, including revolts, acts of defiance, and self-harm as a form of resistance against their captors' economic interests.
- ⏳ The period from 1700 to 1808 was particularly destructive for the Transatlantic Slave Trade, with a significant number of enslaved Africans trafficked during these years.
- 🏴☠️ The Royal African Company played a central role in the slave trade, maintaining a monopoly on English trade to Africa until the early 18th century.
Q & A
What is the Trans-Atlantic slave trade?
-The Trans-Atlantic slave trade was a period of nearly four hundred years, from the late fifteenth century to the late nineteenth century, during which enslaved Africans were transported across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas.
Which regions were the primary sources of enslaved Africans?
-The primary regions from which enslaved Africans were taken were Senegambia, Sierra Leone & the Windward Coast, the Gold Coast, the Bight of Benin, the Bight of Biafra, and West Central Africa, also known as Kongo and Angola.
What was the Middle Passage and why was it named so?
-The Middle Passage was the second leg of the triangular trade route, during which enslaved Africans were transported from Africa to the Americas. It was named the Middle Passage because it was the middle part of the three-part trade system.
What were the three parts of the triangular trade?
-The three parts of the triangular trade were: 1) European goods being shipped to Africa, 2) the transport of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic, and 3) the return of ships to Europe carrying goods like sugar and tobacco.
How many African captives are estimated to have died during the Middle Passage?
-It is estimated that 2 million African captives died during the Middle Passage, with their bodies often thrown overboard.
What percentage of captured Africans were brought directly to the United States?
-Only about 5% of captured Africans were brought directly to what would eventually become the United States.
Which country received the largest proportion of enslaved Africans?
-Brazil received the largest proportion of enslaved Africans, with around 41% of the total.
Why is it important to focus on the narratives of enslaved people themselves?
-Focusing on the narratives of enslaved people provides a perspective on the institution of slavery that few other documents can, offering insights into their experiences and resistance.
What role did other Africans play in the capture and trade of enslaved people?
-Many captured Africans were sold to Europeans by other Africans, often as prisoners of war, criminals, or poor members of society, traded for various goods.
How did enslaved Africans resist during the Middle Passage?
-Enslaved Africans resisted in various ways, including staging revolts, individual acts like refusing to eat or jumping overboard, and enduring torture and other forms of violence.
What was the speculum orum and how was it used against enslaved Africans?
-The speculum orum was a screw-like device used to force open the mouths of resistant Africans, allowing for force-feeding. It often caused severe injuries, including broken teeth, displaced jaws, or ripped mouths.
When did the United States and Britain end the international slave trade?
-The United States ended the international slave trade in 1808, while Britain did so in 1807.
Why is the term 'enslaved' preferred over 'slave' when referring to those held in bondage?
-Using the term 'enslaved' emphasizes the personhood of the individual and that slavery was an involuntarily imposed condition, not an inherent aspect of a person's existence.
Outlines
🚢 The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
This segment introduces the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, a horrific period spanning nearly 400 years from the late 15th to the late 19th century. It discusses the six primary regions from which enslaved Africans were taken, and highlights the work of W.E.B. Du Bois, who described the slave trade as 'the most magnificent drama in the last thousand years of human history,' emphasizing the tragic nature of this period. The script also sets the stage for a challenging discussion, acknowledging the inclusion of topics like sexual violence and extreme violence, which are deemed necessary for a complete understanding of US history. The Middle Passage, a term derived from the triangular trade, is explained, detailing the journey of enslaved Africans from Africa to the Americas and the tragic loss of approximately 2 million lives during this forced migration. The paragraph concludes with a surprising statistic: only about 5% of captured Africans were brought to what is now the United States, with the majority going to Brazil and other parts of the Caribbean and South America.
🌊 The Horrors of the Middle Passage
This paragraph delves into the appalling conditions aboard slave ships during the Middle Passage. It describes the overcrowding, lack of sanitation, and the resulting spread of diseases like yellow fever, malaria, smallpox, and dysentery. The narrative includes a firsthand account from Olaudah Equiano, whose autobiography provides a vivid description of the abhorrent conditions and the psychological and physical torment experienced by the enslaved. The paragraph also addresses the various forms of resistance by the captives, ranging from individual acts like refusing to eat or jumping overboard to collective actions such as revolts. It underscores the significance of these acts as a means of asserting control and autonomy in the face of dehumanization. The segment concludes with a discussion of the brutal methods used to suppress resistance, including torture devices like the speculum orum and thumb-screws, which were designed to inflict maximum pain and submission.
⚖️ The Legacy of the Slave Trade
The final paragraph discusses the historical context and legacy of the slave trade, focusing on the role of the Royal African Company and the state of South Carolina's involvement in the trade. It notes the irony of the 'free trade' era and South Carolina's temporary prohibition and subsequent reopening of the slave trade, leading to a significant influx of enslaved people between 1803 and 1808. The paragraph also touches on the broader timeline of the slave trade's abolition, with the United States and Britain ending the international slave trade in 1808 and 1807, respectively, and the domestic slave trade continuing for decades thereafter. The narrative concludes with a reflection on the long-term impact of the slave trade on the world and the lives of both the enslaved and their descendants, setting the stage for further exploration in subsequent episodes.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Trans-Atlantic slave trade
💡Middle Passage
💡Triangular trade
💡Enslaved Africans
💡Resistance
💡Sexual violence
💡Orlando Patterson
💡Royal African Company
💡South Carolina
💡Charleston
💡Abolition
Highlights
The Trans-Atlantic slave trade spanned nearly 400 years from the late 15th century to the late 19th century.
The majority of enslaved Africans were taken from six primary regions: Senegambia, Sierra Leone & the Windward Coast, the Gold Coast, the Bight of Benin, the Bight of Biafra, and West Central Africa (Kongo and Angola).
Scholar W.E.B. Du Bois described the Atlantic slave trade as 'the most magnificent drama in the last thousand years of human history,' not meant in a positive way.
An estimated 12.4 million people were loaded onto slave ships, and 2 million died during the Middle Passage.
Only about 5% of enslaved Africans were brought directly to the U.S., while 41% went to Brazil and millions to other locations in the Caribbean and South America.
Olaudah Equiano, an African boy captured into slavery, described the terrifying and inhumane experience of being taken aboard a slave ship.
Africans traded into slavery were often prisoners of war, criminals, or poor individuals, sold by other Africans, but their fate in the Americas was distinct as hereditary chattel slavery.
Conditions on slave ships were horrific: Africans were packed together, chained down, and subjected to unsanitary, disease-ridden, and violent conditions.
Acts of resistance by enslaved people during the Middle Passage included revolts, hunger strikes, and attempts to jump overboard.
The speculum orum was a cruel device used to force-feed resistant Africans, often causing severe physical damage.
Historian Marcus Rediker identifies 1700-1808 as the most destructive period of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, with two-thirds of the enslaved trafficked during this time.
Historian Jill Lepore states that out of 100 people taken from Africa's interior, only 28-30 survived beyond their first few years in the Americas.
The distinction between using 'enslaved person' rather than 'slave' is important to emphasize the personhood of those forced into bondage.
The Royal African Company was a major player in the slave trade, controlling English trade to Africa in the late 1600s and early 1700s.
South Carolina, despite banning the slave trade in 1787, reopened it between 1803 and 1808, during which 35,000 enslaved people were brought to the state.
Although the U.S. and Britain officially ended the international slave trade in 1808, illegal trafficking and the domestic slave trade continued.
Transcripts
Hi, I’m Clint Smith, and this is Crash Course Black American History,
and today we’re learning about the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, which
spanned nearly four hundred years from the late fifteenth century to the late nineteenth century.
The majority of enslaved Africans were taken from six primary regions, Senegambia,
Sierra Leone & the Windward Coast, the Gold Coast, the Bight of Benin, the Bight of Biafra, and West
Central Africa also known as Kongo and Angola. In his 1935 book Black Reconstruction in America,
scholar and civil rights leader W.E.B. Du Bois described the Atlantic slave trade as
“the most magnificent drama in the last thousand years of human history.”
And he didn’t mean “magnificent” in a good way. INTRO
I want to note up top that this episode will address some challenging topics
including sexual violence and images of extreme violence. We believe, however,
it is important to discuss these ideas thoroughly, so that we can fully grapple
with the reality of US History. An estimated 12.4 million people
were loaded onto slave ships and carried through what came to be known as the Middle Passage,
which moved across the Atlantic and included many different destinations.
It was named the Middle Passage because it was the second of three parts of what became known
as the triangular trade. The first leg of the journey carried cargo like textiles,
iron, alcohol, firearms, and gunpowder from Europe to Africa’s western coast.
When the ships reached the coast of Western Africa, the cargo was exchanged for people.
From there, ships, loaded with human beings made their way to the Americas,
where the enslaved Africans were sold and exchanged for goods like sugar and tobacco,
before the ships made their way back to Europe. It is estimated that, over the course of the
Middle Passage, 2 million African captives died, their bodies often thrown overboard.
What some people might not know about the slave trade is that the vast majority of people did not
actually go to the United States, far from it. In fact, only about 5% of captured Africans
were brought directly to what would eventually become the U.S. The largest proportion,
around 41%, went to Brazil, while millions of others were scattered across islands
throughout the Carribean and South America. As we examine slavery in the United States,
from its earliest moments when people are first taken from their homes, all the way through the
end of the Civil War, it is important to lift up the narratives and accounts of enslaved people
themselves, as they can provide us with a perspective on this horrific institution,
in ways that few other documents can. For example, Olaudah Equiano,
an African captured as a boy, wrote in his 1789 autobiography,
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, about the experience
of being captured and taken to the edge of the ocean and being boarded onto the ship:
I was immediately handled and tossed up to see if I were sound by some of the crew; and I was
now persuaded that I had gotten into a world of bad spirits, and that they were going to kill me.
Their complexions too differing so much from ours, their long hair, and the language they spoke,
(which was very different from any I had ever heard) united to confirm me in this belief…
When I looked round the ship too and saw a large furnace or copper boiling,
and a multitude of black people of every description chained together,
every one of their countenances expressing dejection
and sorrow, I no longer doubted of my fate;
and, quite overpowered with horror and anguish, I fell motionless on the deck and fainted.
Captured Africans didn’t really have an understanding of what lay ahead for them. Enslaved
Africans weren’t coming back to Africa from the Americas and warning people about what happened.
All people knew, was what they saw in front of them. A large ship. An endless ocean.
And for many of these Africans, people speaking a language they had never heard,
with a color skin some of them had never seen. It is also important to note
that the story is not as simple as Africans being hunted and captured by Europeans and
forced onto ships against their will. The Africans who were taken and placed
onboard these ships were typically prisoners of war from other African tribes, criminals,
and poor members of society who were often traded to pay off debts. Which is to say,
many captured Africans were sold to Europeans, by other Africans, for a range of different goods.
Now, this fact can sometimes be used in bad faith to obfuscate the horror of what Europeans did.
And while it is important not to ignore, the fact that there were Africans trading other
Africans into bondage, we should remember that being a prisoner of war or a poor
member of a society traded for goods is not the same thing as being held in intergenerational,
hereditary chattel slavery that meant your children and their children and
their children would all be born into bondage. That is something unique to the experience of
slavery in the Americas. As the scholar Orlando Patterson has written “Slavery is the permanent,
violent, and personal domination of natally alienated and generally dishonored persons.”
You’ve likely heard about how horrible the conditions were on the slave ships,
but it’s worth naming explicitly. The conditions on these ships were horrific.
People were packed by the hundreds alongside one another, chained down, unable to move.
The captured Africans were forced to relieve themselves in the same places where they slept,
sat, and ate. As a result, the stench from the bottom of the ship, where there was
little ventilation, was unbearable. Disease was rampant. From yellow fever to malaria,
from smallpox to dysentery, it is difficult to capture how abhorrent the conditions were.
To imagine this, it is helpful to hear from Equiano again:
“I was soon put down under the decks, and there I received such a salutation in my
nostrils as I had never experienced in my life: so that, with the loathsomeness of the stench,
and crying together, I became so sick and low that I was not able to eat…The
closeness of the place, and the heat of the climate, added to the number in the ship,
being so crowded that each had scarcely room to turn himself, almost suffocated us.
This produced copious perspirations, so that the air soon became unfit for respiration,
from a variety of loathsome smells, and brought on a sickness among the slaves, of which many died.”
Violence against the captured Africans was a devastating yet ubiquitous phenomenon as
these ships crossed the Atlantic. In an effort to keep people submissive
over the course of the several week-long trips, enslaved Africans were tortured
in a variety of cruel and unimaginable ways. Sexual violence was a common fixture as well.
It was not uncommon for sailors to rape enslaved women while onboard.
But enslaved people did not just passively accept the conditions that had been thrust
onto them, and they resisted in a myriad of ways. Some of these ways were individual and
some of them were collective. All of them were attempts at reclaiming some sense of
agency and control in inconceivable circumstances. Sometimes they were as explicit as staging revolts
meant to overthrow the crew. And sometimes they included individual acts of resistance
like refusing to eat or jumping overboard. Now, the idea of trying to take one’s own life,
might seem like a strange form of resistance to some. But what you have to consider is that these
captured Africans represented money, like real money, to those who were holding them in chains on
these ships. So someone attempting to take their own life, represented the ability to determine the
outcomes of your life for yourself, rather than having it imposed on you by someone else. It also
allowed them to undermine the economic incentives that undergirded the entire institution.
Furthermore, in the case of jumping overboard, some of the captured Africans’ spiritual beliefs
gave them the sense that if they could just make it into the water, the ocean would carry their
bodies home. Sometimes, as a result, the enslavers on the ship would put nets on the side of the
boat, to prevent people from jumping into the sea. One of the most heinous responses to slave
resistance during the Middle Passage, came in the form of the speculum orum [ohr-UHM], which was a
screw-like device that forced someone’s mouth open and allowed the resistant African to be force-fed
against their will. It was not uncommon for this device to break someone’s teeth,
displace their jaw, or rip their mouth apart. If that didn’t work, other interventions included
placing hot coals on a person’s lips until they opened their mouths—or thumb-screws, a device in
which a victim’s fingers or toes were placed in a vise, and slowly crushed until they complied.
Given all of this, we should be clear that the decision millions made to stay alive
in the face of unimaginable violence and uncertainty,that too, was an act of resistance.
Historian Marcus Rediker indentifies the period from 1700 to 1808 as the most destructive time
of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. Roughly two-thirds of the total of enslaved Africans
were trafficked out of Africa and to the Americas during this period.
What’s more, the death toll of the transatlantic slave trade was staggering.
According to historian Jill Lepore, for every one hundred people taken from Africa’s interior,
only sixty-four of them would survive the trip to the coast itself. Of those sixty-four,
around forty-eight would survive the weeks-long journey across the Atlantic.
Of those forty-eight who stepped off the ship, only twenty-eight to thirty would survive the
first three to four years in the colony. Before we go on, a quick note here about
language: throughout this series we will try to be consistent in using the term enslaved rather than
slave to refer to African and African-descended people who were held in bondage. This distinction
is important because saying enslaved person or enslaved worker or enslaved human being centers
the personhood of the individual and emphasizes that slavery is a condition that was involuntarily
imposed on someone, rather than being an inherent condition to someone’s existence.
One of the central players in the slave trade was England’s Royal African Company: a chartered
firm that maintained a monopoly on all English trade to Africa following its inception in 1672.
The period of 1675 to 1725 represented the most active years of the Royal African Company,
but it continued to play an active role in the first several decades of the eighteenth
century--an era known as ‘free trade.’ The irony of that term is not lost on me.
I think it’s worth honing in on one state, and its particular relationship to the slave trade,
in order to better understand how this played out. According to the work of historian Ira Berlin,
the state of South Carolina prohibited the African slave trade beginning in 1787.
In 1803, however, the state reopened the transatlantic slave trade. It remained opened
until 1808, when the federal prohibition of the atlantic slave trade went into effect.
Between 1803 and 1808, over 35,000 enslaved people were brought to South Carolina
(more than twice as many as in any similar period in its history as a colony or state).
The coast of Charleston was the point of entry for approximately 40 percent
of the enslaved Africans who were brought to North America through the middle passage.
This has led some to refer to it as African-American’s Ellis Island, though an
obvious difference is that one group came here via their own free will and one group did not.
The federal government ended the international slave trade in 1808.
The British had done so in 1807. However, traders from both nations continued illegally
trafficking captive Africans for many years later. And while the international slave
trade was abolished in the United States, the domestic slave trade would continue.
In Britain, it took another quarter century before slavery was officially abolished in 1833,
and in the United States it took almost another sixty years
and our nation’s deadliest war, to end it. Spanish and Brazilian traders
continued trafficking captive Africans for another half century.
Brazil, which, remember, had the largest proportion of enslaved people trafficked across
the ocean, was the final country in the Western world to abolish slavery, doing so in 1888.
The transatlantic slave trade was a cruel, violent, abhorent centuries-long-project that
would shape the trajectory of the world, of both black and white life, in ways that we’ll soon come
to more fully understand. We’ll continue to talk about some of these in our next few episodes.
Thanks for watching, I’ll see you next time. Crash Course is made with the help of
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