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  1. Yet the domestic slave trade continued into the war’s final moments. Hill, Dickinson & Co made more than $1m from selling enslaved people between October and December 1864.

  2. The Island of Gorée off the coast of Senegal is a UNESCO heritage site and a symbol of the suffering, pain and death of the transatlantic slave trade. UN News: How should those legacies be...

  3. 4,400 killed in lynchings and other acts of racial violence (1877-1950), up to at least 10,000 unjust deaths from 1866 to 1951 according to We Charge Genocide Victims 597,000 Africans imported as slaves [5] — a slave from the age of 1 to 14 had twice the mortality rate of White Americans of the same age and Black slaves during the ...

  4. The serial violence and exploitation suffered by victims during the Slave Trade is not taught or spoken about enough in historical cases. As such this video ...

  5. On the night of August 21, together with seven fellow slaves in whom he had put his trust, he launched a campaign of total annihilation, murdering Travis and his family in their sleep and then setting forth on a bloody march toward Jerusalem. In two days and nights about 60 white people were ruthlessly slain.

  6. Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Law and Order in 19th Century America (Module 53) This module documents the international and domestic traffic in slaves in Britain’s New World colonies and the United States, providing important primary source material on the business aspect of the slave trade.

  7. An exception here is AshcraftEason’s intriguing article on Fenda Lawrence, an Atlantic Creole and female slave trader from Senegambia who travelled as a free black woman on a slave ship to Savannah, Georgia in 1772 where she settled, possibly to protect her rights and estate after the death or departure of her English husband (pp. 209–10).