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Antelope (1802 slave ship) was a Spanish slave ship captured near Florida in 1820 with 283 captives aboard, leading to The Antelope case. Ariel Brig mentioned in Bernard Raux slave trade papers, 1828-1836, Harvard University Library. Aurore (slave ship), along with Duc du Maine, the first French slave ships that brought the first slaves to ...
A. Accomplished Quaker (1795 ship) Active (1781 ship) Active (1789 ship) Admiral Kingsmill (1796 ship) Adventure (1799 ship) Adventure (1802 ship) Æolus (1787 ship)
Slave ship: For Robert Bent. Unknown date Russia: G. Ignatyev Archangelsk: Isidor: Iaroslav-class ship of the line: For Imperial Russian Navy. [40] Unknown date France: La Raison: Flûte: For French Navy. [41] Unknown date France: Bayonne: La Tapageuse: Brig-corvette: For French Navy. [42] Unknown date Great Britain: Thomas Hearn North Shields ...
Pages in category "American slave ships" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Clotilda (slave ship)
She entered the registers as Expedition in 1795. Between 1799 and 1807 she made seven voyages as a Liverpool-based slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She was condemned as unseaworthy at Antigua in early 1808, after having earlier disembarked at Jamaica the captives from her seventh voyage.
Although the British captured Amelia in 1793, she does not appear in Lloyd's Register until 1795. At that time her master is Whitock, her owner is Lushington, and her trade is London—St Vincent. [1] [a] In late 1795 and early 1796, Amelia sailed as part of Admiral Hugh Cloberry Christian's expedition to the West Indies. [6]
Whydah Gally ( Great Britain): The slave ship was captured in late February in the Windward Passage by Sultana ("Black Sam" Bellamy). She wrecked in a storm off Cape Cod two months later, taking Bellamy, 143 men, and 4.5 tons of treasure with her – and was the first pirate ship wreck ever discovered in North America, in 1984.
Lloyd's List reported on 26 May that a French privateer of 14 guns had captured Onslow, Giles, master, as she was sailing from Liverpool to Africa. [6] [a] In 1797, 40 British slave ships were lost, 11 of them on the way to Africa. This was the second worst year for losses after the 50 losses in 1795. [8]