24 Hour Museum  
 
Text-only Version
November 22 2008
Search this site
Home
City Guides
Show Me
News
Exhibitions
What's On
Trails
Website of the Week
Links
For Museums and Galleries
For Teachers
For Volunteers
Press
Welsh Home
About Us
ICONS - a portrait of England
Map Search
Exhibitions Online
e-news Registration
arts council england logo
MLA
System Simulation Ltd
 
CHASING FREEDOM - THE ROYAL NAVY & SUPPRESSION OF THE SLAVE TRADE
By Graham Spicer 06/02/2007
watercolour painting of two 19th century sailing ships at sea

HMS Black Joke capturing El Almirante in 1829. The Black Joke was an ex-slave ship herself and the most successful ship of the West Africa Squadron. Courtesy RNM

In the bicentenary year of the abolition of Britain’s transatlantic slave trade, the Royal Naval Museum in Portsmouth is exploring the role played by the Navy in helping to combat the trade.

After Parliament outlawed the slave trade on March 25 1807, the West Africa Squadron patrolled the seas off West Africa for the next 60 years, searching and detaining slave ships and liberating some 150,000 enslaved Africans.

Chasing Freedom: The Royal Navy and the Suppression of the Transatlantic Slave Trade 1807-2007 runs until January 27 2008 and examines this little-known story.

Day to day life patrolling the West Africa coastline is detailed through extracts from original diaries like those of Midshipman CH Binstead, an officer on squadron flagship HMS Owen Glendower.

Binstead's diaries recounted the horrors to be found on slave ships. © Press Association

photo of an old journal being examined through a magnifying glass

Binstead recounts his horror at boarding overcrowded, disease-ridden slave ships and watches his own crew suffer from tropical diseases like yellow fever, dysentry and malaria. Many sailors and slaves died in the process:

“Many large whales and sharks about us the later [sic] is owing to the number of poor fellows who have lately been thrown overboard,” he wrote.

“The ship is now truly miserable many of our own crew very sick and the decks crowded with black slaves who are dying in all directions and apprehensive their cases of fever are contagious.”

A reconstruction of a slave deck vividly shows the suffering endured by the millions of enslaved Africans. Artefacts from the trade are also available to examine and handle, including leg irons, handcuffs and a neck collar.

drawing of a nineteenth century naval officer stood on the deck of a ship

Lieutenant Binstead, portrayed in 1826. Courtesy RNM

Two new films have been produced for the exhibition, looking at some of the key figures of the abolition movement. The first recreates the arguments from both sides of the political debate, where even Admiral Lord Nelson was involved, putting forth his arguments for and against the Navy’s role in combating the trade.

In the second film - also a reconstruction - liberated Africans and the African Chief King Guezo of Dahomey describe their first-hand experiences in the suppression of the trade.

The displays will also highlight the historic and continuing role of the Royal Navy in combating people trafficking and piracy around the world.

“The role of the Royal Navy in combating this infamous trade cannot be overerestimated,” said Dr Colin White, Director of the Royal Naval Museum. “Chasing Freedom will really bring home the human situation for sailor and slave alike and chart the relentless efforts by the Royal Navy to combat slavery.”

Royal Naval Museum
 

HM Naval Base, Portsmouth, PO1 3NH, Hampshire, England
T: 023 92 727562
Open: April-October Daily 1000-1700 November-March Daily 1000-1630 Closed 25 26 December

Related Articles
Museums And Galleries Get Behind Cultural Olympiad Weekend
Treasures On Show In Country Houses Thanks To Tax Scheme
Taskforce South - The Falklands War At Royal Navy Museum
Online Museum Makes Waves For The Senior Service
News In Brief - Week Ending February 4 2007
News In Brief - Week Ending December 24 2006
News In Brief - Week Ending September 17 2006
| e-news registration | e-mail story to a friend | tell us what you think |
 
Black Watch Museum Appeal Seeks To Raise £3millionBlack Watch Museum Appeal Seeks To Raise £3million
News In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage NewsNews In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage News
Newly-Accredited Medical College Invests In Mysterious PortraitNewly-Accredited Medical College Invests In Mysterious Portrait
Photos Of WWII Codecrackers Go On Sale At Bletchley ParkPhotos Of WWII Codecrackers Go On Sale At Bletchley Park
Painting Returns To Queen Victoria's Dressing Room After 166-Year AbsencePainting Returns To Queen Victoria's Dressing Room After 166-Year Absence
Cartoon Awards Ceremony Celebrates UK's Top Scribblers At Mall GalleriesCartoon Awards Ceremony Celebrates UK's Top Scribblers At Mall Galleries
Made08 - The Brighton Craft Fair 2008Made08 - The Brighton Craft Fair 2008
Library Thief To Be Sentenced At Wood Green Crown Court TodayLibrary Thief To Be Sentenced At Wood Green Crown Court Today
New Look For The Relaunched Garden Museum In LambethNew Look For The Relaunched Garden Museum In Lambeth
Write Queer London Competition Holds Inspiration Day At The British MuseumWrite Queer London Competition Holds Inspiration Day At The British Museum
Downs House Darwin Discovery Project Wins Funding Go-Ahead
British Museum Gets Set For Historic Egyptian Tomb Gallery
Stunning Wedgwood Relaunch Celebrates Potteries Heritage
Library Bid To Save Earliest Surviving Score Of Opera In English Language
Ryedale Folk Museum Lands Significant Harrison Collection
Portable Antiquities Scheme Is Fit For Purpose Say MLA
Leading Academics Call For Art Funding Support In Wake Of Titian Pledge
Glasgow Police Museum Edges Closer To A New Home
Search for more news
e-news Registration