THE SLAVE TRADE and the Channel Islands
I have been researching Channel Islands' maritime and related history for 50 years.
Since there is now a topical interest in the trade and its modern-day implications I am publishing this part chapter which deals mostly with the Guernsey connection - but there is much more already written about Jersey's involvement and how this all became the early days of the "finance sector" which dominates these Islands today.
So you are welcome to read this part and I hope it will add to your knowledge.
Slaving Contradictions
Significantly, Olaudah Equiano aka Gustavus Vassa had become a noted figure in Britain ’s abolitionist campaign besides promoter
of the Sierra Leone
or Bulama projects. He was an ex-slave who in 1789 had published his
autobiography which proved to be a best seller. Paul Le Mesurier`s name
appeared as a subscriber to the first edition along with many pages of others
of influence and/or status including John
Wesley who had published his own powerfully critical, Thoughts Upon
Slavery speech, in 1774.
Equiano had proclaimed himself a Methodist.
He was also among the brave handful who founded the London
Corresponding Society in 1792.
Yet there was more because Equiano had been brought as a “slave” to
Europe in 1755 on the Industrious Bee snow, captain Michael Henry Pascal, part-owner
Nicholas Dobrée of Guernsey .
Although he was initially intended as a present for somebody in England , the ten years old boy was taken to
Guernsey where he stayed for some months, living “happily” with a Guernsey family. He was then shipped aboard a naval
vessel with his owner Pascal, achieving the rank of Able Seaman. Subsequently,
he visited Pascal’s friends in London , including
Maynard and Mary Guerin (who became his God-parents at his Baptism in 1759),
returning to Guernsey again briefly in 1762.
In December he was sold to slaver James Doran then shipped to Montserrat to experience many more adventures and
insults. He worked at various jobs such as hairdresser, merchant and even
“slave trader” besides serving again in the navy before writing his book.
James Doran was also a privateer commander employed by
Hillhouse & Co., shipbuilders and “slavers” at Bristol in 1757. He sold Equiano to a Quaker.
John-William was another "young negro boy"
of about 10 years of age, born in Guiny and brought to Guernsey
from Guadaloupe where he was Christened in 1761. His Godfathers were captains
John and William Rivoire with Mrs. Esther Roland as Godmother "relict of
Mr Simon-Peter Rivoire."
George another "negro boy" of about 12 years
of age was baptised in 1770. His Godfathers were Peter Maingy and William
Rivoire and Godmother Mrs Marie Rivoire.
(Source Priaulx Library).
Paul Le Mesurier was born in Guernsey
in 1755. He would most likely not have met Equiano as a child, but both the
Dobrée and Le Mesurier families were involved in the slave-trade as was the
East India Company for which Paul was a Director and an M.P. The India Company
traded slaves mostly from East Africa, Madagascar
or Zanzibar to the Middle East and India but there was also trafficking from India to South Africa .
Some slaves were shipped onwards across the Atlantic
too through merchant networks.
Paul’s mother was Martha Dobrée,
in a complicated family network in which Nicholas Dobrée was probably Paul’s uncle.
Nicholas Dobrée (born 1732) had married Susanne Le
Pelley in 1752 then in 1769 to Elizabeth Gilchrist of Southampton
who died in 1770. She might have been the daughter of a naval officer.
Dobrée was linked to the radical John Wilkes family through
the Nantes ’
Protestant Menuret and London De Ponthrieu, merchant families. The Wilkes
family had plantation interests in the West Indies .
Israel Wilkes of London had married Miss De Ponthrieu,
daughter of an eminent Hamburgh merchant in 1752.
Maynard Guerin was yet another from a
Huguenot ancestry with Channel Islands
relatives. He was employed as a banking agent for men serving in the army or navy
through Drummond’s Bank. He dealt with Michael Pascal’s affairs during his navy
service.
Guerin died in May 1760 at Westminster , apparently within a few days of
the death of his son, of the same name and employment.
The Guerin family had a slave-owning branch in Virginia with another in Ireland .
The name Maynard derived from a partnership with John
Maynard a London
merchant. A Daniel Guerin from Clairac (Gascony )
probably founded the Guernsey branch of the
family. His son William married Margaret Dumaresq. Daniel and James Guerin were
married into the Allez families of Guernsey in
the 1730s and a James Major Guerin
was one of many children fathered by James Guerin (born 1734).
A Peter Guerin served on the Snugg 2 guns
privateer/smuggler of Guernsey in 1757.
The Le Mesurier & Secretan owned Columbus ship of London was commanded by Daniel Guerin in 1787 and seized at Barbados for smuggling but on
appeal to the High Court of Admiralty the verdict was overturned. The landmark
case is discussed elsewhere.
A Daniel Guerin was reported as Commander of a Sirene
brig privateer of 16 guns lost with all hands off Honduras about 1795.
Michael Pascal died in Southampton
in 1786. He too had strong connections with the Channel Islands, so besides bequeathing
money and property to the Guerin family he also left his uniform sword and
sword belt to “my good friend” Philip Carteret, the famous Jersey-born
circumnavigator. He left five pounds and “my
silver mounted sword to my good friend Paul Le Mesurier.”
Pascal was Provincial Grand Master of Hampshire
Freemasons in 1784. Both Carteret and Le Mesurier were Freemasons.
The involvement of the Maugers of the Channel Islands in the African trade has been referred to
elsewhere. The precise relationship of Joshua, the Jersey-born Newfoundland merchant
with Charles of Guernsey, is not clear but they were both active participants.
Furthermore, they were also in partnerships with other Channel Islanders in
this miserable business.
Hence, John Mauger commanded the Cumberland in 1749 shipping Africans to Barbados
and the African in 1750. William Le Mesurier with Daniel Tupper were owners
and sellers at Speight’s Town of men and women from the latter’s cargo.
The Brocks with Elisha Tupper were also
involved in similar shipments.
Philip Mauger commanded the Neptune of
Jersey for owner James Lempriere in 1761/2 shipping Africans from Senegal to unrecorded Caribbean
destinations. This was especially significant because there was a
constitutional dimension to be exploited in shipping slaves from or to
territories under the control of differing nations.
James Seaborne had commanded the Charles
on a slaving voyage from Guernsey via the Ivory
Coast to Barbados
in 1739. This might have been the second voyage for James Seaborne described as
"of Guernsey " because he was at Ahimamahoe Road on
20 September 1738 in the House of Commons Journal.
He was an experienced slaver sailing out of Bristol in the 1730's usually for Barbados .
Inevitably, Channel Islanders were ideally
placed to participate in a trade that required scarce or restricted commodities
to be shipped to Africa to be sold or bartered
for slaves. Goods such as ivory or gold were also traded at Madeira
or other place for wines or brandy. There was a financial advantage to be
exploited too through sailing under false flags. British goods might be passed
off as French in exchange for cargoes of Africans who had no concept of such
labels but whose value on earth might be determined in accordance with the
scarcity of sugar or the quality of a tobacco crop.
The Island of Tobago
in the Caribbean Windward group had been confirmed under British sovereignty at
the peace settlement in 1763 along with Grenada ,
St. Vincent and Dominica .
Tobago was captured again by the French in
1781. It was supposed to trade only with French allies after 1783 until the
British returned ten years later. In 1803 the French flag was hoisted once more
– albeit briefly.
All these changes were
very upsetting for the resident colonists - and no doubt created special
problems for the more numerous slaves too - but some of those planters who
could left the Island altogether.
Others, like Joseph Robley, stayed and prospered.
Joseph Robley, the eighteen years old son of a Lake District clergyman, was initially
posted to Tobago as a navy-office clerk in
1768. Besides attending to his clerical duties he invested in a plantation too,
specialising in growing cotton.
By 1789 he was a very
wealthy man, owning many neat estates with windmills of his own special design
and two ships – the Phoenix and the
Laird – which twice each year
transported his produce out and brought supplies in. The ships were
impressively large. One was said to resemble a navy frigate - the other - “a
ship of the line.”
Yet,
in spite of their impressive size, two anchored ships including the Phoenix , out of four
flying French colours at Tobago were seized by H.M.S. Venus in June 1803 and removed as prizes of war to Grenada .
News that the countries were at war had not yet reached the Island
so that the navy had an unfair advantage. Robley (the Island’s President) sought
restitution through his London
agent, nephew John Robley. The Admiralty upheld the navy action, the vessels
were declared as good prizes and Robley faced a loss of £40,000.
By 1803 the Tobago plantations were at the peak of their production
of sugar – which was the mainstay of the economy – at about 9,000 tons or
14,000 hogsheads each year. Other products were the sugar spin-offs of molasses
and rum besides cotton, coffee, lime juice, tortoiseshell, arrowroot and
hardwood. That year too Robley of Sandy
Point even received a Gold Medal for his breadfruit cultivation from the London Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce.
The slave population
had also peaked at about 17,000, or one to work every two acres of cultivated
land.
They were, according
to the terminology of the time “worked rigorously” in spite of all the helpful
windmills and one observer optimistically wrote that :
Next to the plantation of Sir
William Young at St Vincent’s, I do not believe that there were any men in
existence, employed in cultivation, more happy than the negroes of the Robley
plantation in 1803.
The number of resident
European proprietors to supervise the Africans was only about 500 to 800
besides about 350 “coloureds” or mulattos so that the threat of rebellion was
always present. The French colonies of St. Domingo (Haiti ),
Guadeloupe and Martinique had all experienced
serious recent insurrections.
Barbarous repression
was the order of the day throughout the plantations of all countries. Tobago’s
government – Joseph Robley being several times Governor – was considered
progressive in 1803 when it introduced capital punishment for proprietors who
were found guilty of killing a slave. Previously the Island
court only imposed a £15 fine for such an act of “wanton killing.”
In Britain , the Anti-Slavery movement was already
moving towards a suppression of the dreadful trade in British territories but
other countries, such as Holland , were expanding
their plantations in new colonies like Guiana .
By 1805 London forbade the expansion of plantations in Tobago . The annual import of new slaves was restricted to
a maximum of 3% of the existing population, under a licence system.
The supply of slaves
on British vessels to Guiana or other new
colonies was also forbidden.
It is no great surprise
therefore, that the typical price of a slave increased from £70 in 1807 to £105
by 1811. Inevitably, the incentive for traders to break the rules in the
pursuit of profit was very great.
Cutting, the American
merchant at Le Havre had advised Le Mesurier
that slaves "can be obtained by contract in London at £32 per head" in 1791.
For the colonists of Tobago the need to create a supply network that was
immune to the vagaries of war was an impossible dream but there were ways and
means to achieve some degree of certainty. Ports such as Ostend
and Dunkirk had
a long history of accommodating rogue governments or their trading agents.
Other French ports like Cherbourg, Le Havre, St Malo, L’Orient and Nantes had
an important role to play, especially during times of war. The proximity of
these places to the Channel Islands was also important. The presence of so many
merchants and financiers with old family connections across national borders
was like the lubricant in a very large engine of commerce.
Thus, Havilland Le
Mesurier had commenced his commercial training with a merchant - most likely
André Limozin – at Le Havre (Havre De Grace). He set up a commercial
partnership with brother Paul in 1785 at that port specifically to trade with
French governed Tobago in an ever-changing
world.
Initially, William
Collow was suggested as a partner for the new Le Havre enterprise but Joseph
Robley together with Messrs King & Watson of Dunkirk, Abraham Buisson of
Guernsey & London and Francois Claude Adam Delamotte were partners too by
1790.
David Watson,
Guernsey-born in 1771, served as Le Mesurier's Havre agent in the 1790's
assisted by one Veroillet with Delamotte and Dubuisson providing clerical
services.
Le Mesurier et Cie
despatched six vessels to Tobago from Havre in
1789, Limozin sent another five, the Collow Brothers a similar number and
Bachelor & Faubisson one.
Several other French
ports - notably Dunkirk
- were used by various partnerships but Havre enjoyed a particular attraction
at this time.
The Collow brothers
seemed to be involved in many transactions and businesses. Their partners in
1783/5 included Irishman Corneille Donovan with Jacques Carmichael and Jean Beziers from Amsterdam and
the infamous Lancaster
born Miles Barber.
Bezier,
Carmichael and Donovan had been commercially active during the American War and
were negotiating to sell prize goods taken into L'Orient by the Comte d'Artois corsaire, among
others, in 1780.
The inducement to sail under a foreign flag was revealed by the voyage of the
Messrs Le Mesurier
& Secretan's Columbus ship was Bahamas built and registered in London from whence she
sailed in ballast for Gothenburg on 14 November 1786 under the command of
Daniel Guerin.
She loaded a cargo of
herrings in Sweden "for
Tobago and elsewhere" but gales supposedly drove her into Madeira for repairs and fresh water.
At Madeira a
consignment of local wine was bartered for some of the herrings and the voyage
continued on about 7 March for Tobago , then
French controlled.
The Columbus arrived there on 2
April and under a permit from the Governor sold the remaining herrings and part
of the Madeira wine.
Guerin purchased a
cargo of American (USA) timber there from Daniel King
& Co (supposed British merchants at Tobago) and exchanged some of the
Madeira for Claret (from a French ship) and paid for a few more cases
"with bills drawn on Paul Le Mesurier of Havre de Grace in favour of
French Captain Falaise."
Falaise being the surname of several Guernsey
captains.
Next, the plan was to sail for Barbados , sell the timber and freight with
sugars for London .
Unfortunately the English government had
recently approved temporary legislation, that forbade the loading of American
products at Tobago and Guerin claimed to be ignorant of this when arrested off Bridgetown , Barbados .
There was no port or harbour at Bridgetown so the Columbus was anchored in the roads of Carlisle Bay ,
as was usual practice, when a platoon of soldiers was sent on board by Governor
Parry to seize and secure the vessel on 8 June 1787.
Naval captain Barnes had previously warned
Guerin of the proposed action and advised him to sail to a neutral Island but neither the Governor nor the acting customs
officers would negotiate with Guerin or anybody else.
In the absence of the regular Customs
Controller for Barbados
it was Surveyor-General William Senhouse who had engineered the seizure with
his "instrument" Samuel Deersley. The Governor was evidently integral
to the plot and the condemnation of ship and cargo was duly confirmed at the Barbados Vice-Admiralty Court
hearing soon afterwards.
Although Paul Le Mesurier M.P. had been
present when the relevant temporary law had been "strenuously
debated" in Parliament and ship-owners in London were "alarmed"
at the policy, his appeal before the High Court of Admiralty in London was
successful.
The four days of legal argument before
James Marriott commenced on 18 December 1789 and the Judge described it as a
"leading case as many others depend on it."
The judgement delivered a strong censure of
the London government and almost everybody involved officially in Barbados but praised the enterprising
spirit of merchants such as Le Mesurier, "it would be well for this
country if there were many such Harlequins...it is from small profits that
great ones are accumulated".
Furthermore, Marriott had some interesting
observations to express about the evasion of taxes and laws. He declared :
The Law of
England cannot be evaded...the law exists or does not exist...but everyman is
justified in this war of private property and public revenue in this collision
of interests, of attack and defence of the property of the subject and free
intercourse of commerce.
The Columbus case reported in Collectanea Juridica -Tracts regarding
the Law and Constitution of England. Published London 1791.
Correspondence
from Paul Le Mesurier regarding this case exists in NA HO 42/12 and he wrote,
presumably to the Secretary of State Lord Sydney, on 1 August 1789 -
"Wednesday ½ past one" - attaching a dossier of papers. His letter
started re "A ship of mine which is seized at Barbados but I understand clearly
that the whole is the Act of Governor Parry."
"Hoping
I am not asking anything improper in requesting you to write to him in such a
manner as you shall think the law merits."..."I shall be highly
obliged if through your means I may obtain a speedy liberation of my
ship."
He
described the Columbus as British-built, 230 tons, London registered and
belonging to Paul le Mesurier.
Ship-owner Daniel King
who had been resident (possibly even born) in Tobago, became naturalised as
French in 1785 having settled at Dunkirk but he was arrested in October 1793 as
a 36 years old “foreigner” along with his partner Peter Watson (28).
The French Convention
had decreed the detention of all English, Scotch, Irish and Hanoverians (except
some children) together with all their papers and effects, that same month.
Thomas Collow from Scotland was also part of the former Tobago
community that had settled at Le Havre
as merchants after 1783. His brother William was married to Sarah Moore of the
Manx trading/smuggling family and usually maintained a London base.
Thomas had previously
been a ship’s captain. In the 1750s he was delivering East India goods to the
Isle of Man in the Charming Molly
from Liverpool .
He too was detained in
prison for several years from 1793.
In spite of having
supplied grain from his warehouse when it was in short supply to residents of
the French port his petitions to be liberated were not successful and he had to
wait until the Jacobins fell from power.
After release he
remained in Le Havre, dying there in 1803.
How M.P. Paul
reconciled this business venture with his abolitionist colleagues in London is
not at all obvious – but, presumably he did not shout too much about it.
Du Buisson was an unusual French name
but a Huguenot Pierre Du Buisson had fled Orleans
in 1685, settling in London
where he was part of a family that were calico and fabric dyers (a business
that a branch of the Secretan family was also involved in). By 1770 the family
was wealthy enough to pay £33,000 for an extensive estate near Llandilo South
Wales, which included a mansion house, woodlands, farms and pastures. Here he
established an iron foundry and knife works, making everything with a blade
besides cannon, shot and other war materials. He also supposedly recruited
French labour, creating a self- contained industrial complex with its own
brewery, laundry, slaughterhouse and mills.
In London the family also
retained business interests with James Henckell & Co. of Dutch origin who
were successful merchants as well as iron and copper workers at Wandsworth.
Peter
Du Buisson junior married Henckell’s daughter.
There
is no clear link with Le Mesurier’s partner but folklore during the Napoleonic
war suggested that the South Wales enterprise
was supplying armaments to the French and also engaged in espionage. This was a
coincidence, bearing in mind the fate of the spy Francis De La Motte on the
scaffold in the previous war.
It
was also suggested that Peter Du Buisson of Hanover Square , London
was a participant in Nathan Rothschild’s spying network as well as having
banking interests through Landeg & Co in Swansea .
In
troubled Paris , bankers Mallet Frères were also
involved in various intrigues and an André Du Buisson featured there too (he
was sent to the Bastille in 1790) but known links to Le Havre are tenuous.
There
were several successful Delamottes
in England including a London merchant named Charles (he died in 1790), besides Hull sugar refiners.
Another branch allegedly included Dutch silk smugglers…
It
was also perhaps just coincidental that Frederick Samuel Secretan, the Swiss
financier and Le Mesurier’s ex-partner, also bought a substantial estate in
South Wales when he left London .
A.J.
Dubuisson was listed as a London
(Cornhill) stockbroker c 1820 when Dubuisson Rougement & Teschemacher were
brokers in Mincing Lane .
Following the
cessation of the American war in 1783 there were many wheeler-dealers looking
for their next business ventures. Some no doubt had the means to carry on with
lucrative war-time scams that circumvented the restrictions of tedious
legislation.
Among the many setting
up shop in Le Havre was Miles Barber who had been in the slaving business for decades out
of Lancaster , Liverpool and London . He traded up to 6,000 Africans each
year to the Americans from his “factories” on the river Gambia , Guinea
and Isle De Los at Sierra
Leone . He had been shipping from Africa with
vessels flying French or neutral flags since the 1760s and continued to trade
during the American war through Dunkirk , Ostend or other suitable
places.
His Liverpool agent
and sometimes ship-master Thomas Hodgson, supplied to Boston
whilst Delaye Frères of Le Havre or L’Orient
shipped to French and other Caribbean
destinations.
Comte Sutton Du
Clonard - the ennobled Irish armateur of Dunkirk
corsaires and Director of the French East India Company – was also involved.
During 1776 he was
slaving to Jamaica or other
places using the Wilbraham out of Liverpool , drawing upon bankers Peter Thellusson & Co
and owned plantation on other islands.
Barber was just one of
dozens trading from Le Havre
who either evaded or avoided the regulations, using the vessels of many
countries, flying various national flags delivering cargoes to and from several
empires or their colonies.
Miles Barber was
established at Ostend
very speedily at the end of the American War.
He had contracted with
Delaye in November 1782 to purchase the former French corsaire Caroline originally seized in the Seven
Years war by the English.
She had been retaken
into L'Orient by an American privateer and refitted. Now she was to be renamed
as Les Trois Amis of Havre and used as a "floating
factory" at Barber's Isle de Los
slaving centre.
Furthermore the Arundel ship under captain White's
command was also to be engaged on account of John Shoolbred the London chief of the English Africa Company in this dubious
enterprise in which Robert & Thomas Hubbert of Jamaica were the likely purchasers
of the human cargo.
Barber
died, an exile from debt, at Le Havre
during 1795 from ”an apoplectic fit,” aged 72.
Yet
the family interest probably continued. A French ship carrying 200 slaves was
captured off the African coast in July 1793 – her commander was listed as M.
Barber junior by Lloyds.
André Limozin of Le Havre was a substantial trader too
with customers and connections all over Europe and the Americas . He was well placed to
provide support to the slave traders or others alongside his own grain, fabrics
and other related merchandising activities. During the war he had enjoyed the
American tobacco monopoly, supporting the rebels in every way possible. He and
the Le Mesuriers were working together soon after the declaration of peace.
They possibly colluded during the war too.
Liverpool was the
dominant British home-port in the Guinea trade after the American war
so that was the place to go for expertise and African contacts. The old Royal
Africa Company (of which the De Carterets of Jersey were founder members) had
ceased trading in 1750 - although the Africa Company still operated out of
London’s Mark Lane, under long-term Secretary, John Shoolbred.
Shoolbred
owned
a fleet of about ten armed
vessels commissioned as LOM's from 1777 to 1782 all registered in London and
from 100 to 400 tons and evidently engaged in the slave-trade. His Bonaventure of 250 tons curiously
employed Philip Journeaux as commander in 1778 but she probably never traded as
the commission was cancelled after six months.
Furthermore, there
were some very rich and powerful individuals or families to call upon. Philip
Sanson, London banker at 65 Lombard Street , President of the
Committee of American Merchants of London, was just such a person trading too
out of Le Havre (and appeared as a Proprietor of
the Sierra Leone
project).
There
were about 500 slaving voyages from London
during the years 1776 to 1807. From Liverpool there were almost 2,500 whilst Bristol ’s share had
decreased to “only” 261.
The international
banking network was an essential part of the slaving business just as it was
the enabler of so much regional and cross-continent smuggling. Access to credit
or the funding of speculative ventures would have been impossible without the
networks of financiers who often operated out of the prestigious trading
centres in Paris , London ,
Rotterdam , Geneva ,
or Hamburg .
The old Huguenot Protestant families seemed to have a particularly far reaching
banking “empire.”
There were other very
practical dimensions too, such as the Swiss manufactured fabrics which were of
good quality and undercut French produced materials. These were an essential
part of the trading/ bartering process that accompanied the human trafficking.
Several Swiss manufacturers were also bankers or closely associated with
financiers, usually with Huguenot origins. Mallett Frères, the Paris bankers was just such a business linked through
marriage with the extensive Oberkampt Swiss banking and fabrics manufacturing
enterprise. Another was the Prevost banking family.
Limozin traded
extensively in fabrics through Le Havre. His many correspondents included
Herries the Bankers in London, Barcelona and elsewhere, Theophilus Daubuz the
Huguenot merchant of London and Cornwall, Mallett Brothers of Jersey, Isaac Dobrée
of Guernsey, John & Henry Le Mesurier of London, Paul Le Mesurier & Co
and Havilland Le Mesurier & Co through Jacques Mauger at Cherbourg.
Paul & Havilland
Le Mesurier were also negotiating with John Tarleton of Liverpool in April 1790
regarding a "joint adventure" with St. Domingo from Le Havre .
The French bounties
and the "uncommon demand for Negroes would I am persuaded turn out a most
lucrative one and far superior in every manner to what we can possibly expect
in any of the English
Islands " John
Tarleton wrote to his brother Clayton.
(Tarleton
papers Liverpool PRO)
The Tarleton -
Backhouse partnership already enjoyed a huge, long established slave trading
business out of Liverpool but clearly wanted
more.
Two years later
Clayton wrote to John when the abolitionist campaign was gaining
support..."there is still no certainty in the Africa Trade."
He saw that France was the place to build up a standby
business base especially since the recent English imposition of a two slaves
maximum per ton would encourage a removal to France . He noted that Bristol and other Liverpool ships were already being fitted out for the French trade and
that the French and Spanish were recruiting Liverpool
captains.
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