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Africana Resources in the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

Melvin K. Hendrix*
Affiliation:
University of Rhode Island

Extract

Beginning in the latter part of the sixteenth century British naval and shipping interests gradually emerged as one of the major maritime forces operating in African waters and, by the end of the eighteenth century, British shipping dominated the export slave trade. The establishment of colonial plantation economies in the Americas, the global expansion of British political and commercial interests resulting from the Napoleonic Wars, and the anti-slave trade suppression campaign in the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century all brought British seafarers into intimate association with African peoples. This relationship became more intense with the scramble for colonial territories throughout the continent in the late nineteenth century.

As a direct consequence of this extensive political and economic relationship a voluminous amount of documentary material exists. One of the principal depositories of this material is the National Maritime Museum (NMM) of Great Britain located in Greenwich, southeast of Central London. This essay reviews some of the documentary holdings found in the Library of the NMM, resources that scholars might find useful in reconstructing British maritime activities in relation to peoples of African descent. Located within the Museum its holdings include printed books and other printed materials, maps and atlases, rare and original manuscripts, ship's plans and drawings, collections on shipwrecks, piracy, and boats, together with various photographic and art collections. While the Library is free and open to the public, it is helpful to contact the Secretary of the NMM with a letter of introduction prior to a first visit.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1987

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References

Notes

1. Two useful references to the holdings of the Library of the NMM are: Guide to the Manuscripts in the National Maritime Museum (London: National Maritime Museum, 1977)Google Scholar; and National Maritime Museum Catalogue of the Library, ed. Sanderson, Michael (6 vols.: London; 1968-1970).Google Scholar

2. National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, SE10 9NF, Tel. (01) 858–4422.

3. Readers should be aware that the codes are subject to change as the records come under review at the Library and, where necessary, should consult the Library's staff for assistance.

4. Details of the case are the subject of Weisbord, Robert, “The Case of the Slave-Ship Zong,” History Today, no. 19 (August 1969), 561–67.Google Scholar

5. Snelgrave's narrative was published as A New Account of Guinea, and the Slave Trade (London, 1754).Google Scholar Portions of his accounts on slave mutinies can be found in George Dow, F., Slave Ships and Slaving (Salem, Mass., [1927]), 113–31.Google Scholar