The largest source of primary material for the slave trade in the principality is found in the archives. The Slebech Papars at the National Library of Wales and the Pennant Collection at the University of Wales, Bangor, document the management of large sugar plantations in Jamaica in the 18th and 19th Century.
They record the names, births, deaths, runaways and diseases of the slaves as well more traditional commodities such as sugar and rum: a reminder that for some merchants the slaves were merely products of the time.
Also present are personal accounts such as Henry de la Beche’s description of his visit to his Jamaican plantation in the 1820s along with the first ever geological map of the country. Thomas Phillips diary, ‘Journal of a Voyage made in the Hannibal of London 1693-1694’ is also featured and is a valued and detailed record of a trip from London to Africa to Barbados.
He writes: “We mark the slaves we had bought on the breast or shoulder with a hot iron, having the ship's name on it.” 300 of the 690 slaves in the hold died before they reached the Caribbean.
Steph Mastoris, Head of the Museum, said: “The exhibit looks at Wales and slavery, past and present. Concentrating on the supports and opposers, it will also highlight issues such as human rights and fair trade, and explain the legacies of slavery in modern day music and popular culture.”
Special talks and workshops will run throughout, and a condensed travelling version will tour Wales in 2008/09.