Slavery Tour Liverpool UK
liverpool
International Slavery Museum
The International Slavery Museum is located in Liverpool's Albert Dock, at the centre of a World Heritage site and only yards away from the dry docks where 18th century slave trading ships were repaired and fitted out.
It is the only museum of its kind to look at aspects of historical and contemporary slavery and takes visitors on a highly thought-provoking and moving journey.
(UK)BRISTOL CITY'S MUSEUM SHOWS BRITAIN'S ROLE IN SLAVERY - ISUPK
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Museum- Liverpool Slavery Museum Uk
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Slavery Trade Part 3
SOME FACTS AND FIGURES 1. For more than 300 years, Britain transported slaves form west Africa to cities such as London, Liverpool and Bristol and then on to the Americas and the Caribbean. 2. Between 10 and 12 million slaves were transported in the trans atlantic slave trade, of which approx 3 million died on the crossing (truly Africas own Holocaust). 3. London was at the heart of the trade as a major port, with ships owned by London merchants and the city funding slaving voyages, insuring cargoes and trading in plantation goods such as cotton and sugar. 4. The profits partly funded the industrial revolution, making Britain one of the richest countries in the world.
Slavery Trade Part 1
SOME FACTS AND FIGURES 1. For more than 300 years, Britain transported slaves form west Africa to cities such as London, Liverpool and Bristol and then on to the Americas and the Caribbean. 2. Between 10 and 12 million slaves were transported in the trans atlantic slave trade, of which approx 3 million died on the crossing (truly Africas own Holocaust). 3. London was at the heart of the trade as a major port, with ships owned by London merchants and the city funding slaving voyages, insuring cargoes and trading in plantation goods such as cotton and sugar. 4. The profits partly funded the industrial revolution, making Britain one of the richest countries in the world.
The British Slave Trade
Britain participated in and profited from the African Transatlantic slave trade long before Parliament abolished chattel slavery, the Africa Trade or Guinea Trade.
Execution Dock of London
Execution Dock, located in Wapping, London, was where pirates, mutineers, and smugglers were executed. They were given the slow strangle and left to hang for all to see.
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inside the slavery gallery in Liverpool
The Atlantic slave trade: What too few textbooks told you - Anthony Hazard
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Slavery has occurred in many forms throughout the world, but the Atlantic slave trade -- which forcibly brought more than 10 million Africans to the Americas -- stands out for both its global scale and its lasting legacy. Anthony Hazard discusses the historical, economic and personal impact of this massive historical injustice.
Lesson by Anthony Hazard, animation by NEIGHBOR.
The Transatlantic Slave Trade by Jeanie Paige Doegg
A brief documentary of the slave trade and all it entailed.
Mill Hands - BBC History 11-13 1985 The History Trail
Vintage BBC History 11-13. The History Trail - Mill Hands investigates the use of child labour in the early textile factories. Produced in 1985 and still a great teaching resource for British Social and Economic History 18th and 19th centuries.
Museum - Promotional Video.wmv
Come and visit the museum and see what we have in store for you!!
War Comes to Victoria: The Lusitania Riot May 8th 1915
The Lusitania departed New York for Liverpool carrying munitions. On May 7, 1915, off Ireland, it was torpedoed and sank immediately. Among the 1,198 dead were many women and children, including entire families from Victoria, Vancouver, Nelson and other BC communities. James Dunsmuir Jr., son of the former Premier and Lieutenant-Governor, also died. He had resigned his officer’s commission to join a British Cavalry regiment.
The news came to Victoria on top of the reports about the first use of poison gas. Soldiers waiting to go overseas gathered in the bar of the former Kaiserhoff Hotel (Blanshard and Johnson Street). The riot began there. Next they attacked the old German-Canadian Club. Mobs attacked any businesses with a German-sounding name on May 8 and 9, even dressmakers and tobacco shops.
The businesses attacked were owned by long-established Canadian families. Some were not German. Families wrote to the papers declaring their citizenship and loyalty. Some renounced their family names. War had come to Victoria.
The mobs did upwards of $35,000 worth of damage.
Original is at the Royal BC Museum youtube channel:
Brian Pead, policing, injustice + law
Lord Denning once ruled ...I do not doubt that, if a favourable decision has been obtained by any improper conduct of the successful party, this court [High Court] will always be ready to grant a new trail. I highly recommend viewing the blogs of 'bexley is bonkers', to see that Brian Pead's case is not unusual in Bexley. Brian Pead is the author of a book on the entire history of Liverpool Football Club. He trained as an English Teacher and later became a headteacher and then a counsellor. At a young age he read the Warren Commission Report on the asassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. He suffered sexual abuse in a childrens' home in Harpendon as a child and had an interest in the topic, especially from a counselling perspective. Following is unfair sacking by Lambeth council, against all logic, he had two offences conjoined illegally against him so as to convince a jury of his supposed guilt (despite a previous Judge Byers at Woolwich refusing joinder on the grounds of the alleged two offences not having a common nexus) as one prosecution at Southwark Crown Court in 2009, using unsigned witness statements against him, a jury not selected by ballot, and being denied his own vital defence witnesses in court by his supposed defence barrister. In November 2011 at Bexley Magistrates, with complainants not present or entering statements against him, Brian was issued a court order not to contact close members of his family. In August 2015 Judge Nicholas Madge sentenced Brian to 2 years jail for breaching the order. In January 2012 Brian Pead saw his trial for supposedly 'failing to notify police of his address' dismissed by judge Robinson at Woolwich Crown Court, telling the jury that a witness was 'falsifying his testimony' against Brian. In the 14th May 2014, Brian was unlawfully sentenced to 6 months' imprisonment for alleged breach of a non-existent court order and a further two months for alleged contempt of court for daring to question the previous matter. 10 prisons in 12 weeks followed. 5 days earlier he had produced an 80-page information memorandum for his latest Member for Parliament Henry Bellingham MP. In June 2015 Brian is sentenced to one month prison for supposedly impersonating a barrister in Kings Lynn County Court when acting as a McKenzie Friend, the one tier of court where any number of non-legally qualified persons can represent litigants, and Brian Pead has never worn a Barrister's wig or gown-it was never even in the supposed evidence presented to the court that he had either-what a waste of taxpayers' money at £3,000 pounds per day over several days over absolutely nothing-but instead the courts and politicians want to cut our rights to a trial by jury to save money, meaning not even a jury of the public will witness anyone being locked up for nothing by a judge in an empty court!
Exploring The Myths - The Bristol Slave Trade
My final year film made at UWE, exploring the links between buildings uses and their connections to the slave trade. My focus was on the night club Basement 45 and whether the building was used for purposes linked to the slave trade.
Slavery, Empire, and the Cabinet of Curiosities: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum
February 28, 2018
James Delbourgo
In 1759, London’s British Museum opened its doors for the first time, the first free national public museum in the world. In this Phi Beta Kappa Lecture at Medical Center Hour, historian James Delbourgo explores the role of slavery and imperialism in making this now venerable institution possible by exploring the career of its founder, Anglo-Irish physician Sir Hans Sloane. Sloane worked in Jamaica as a plantation doctor, used money from sugar plantations in the caribbean and from the Atlantic slave trade to support his collecting, and created his own personal imperial network to assemble one of the greatest cabinets of curiosities in the world—and one of the key institutional legacies of the Enlightenment.
Co-presented with Phi Beta Kappa (Beta of Virginia), President's Commission on Slavery and the University, Department of History, and History of the Health Sciences Lecture Series, Historical Collections, Claude Moore Health Sciences Library
'Remembering Slavery' Trail - Manchester Railway
Filmed at The Museum of Science and Industry on 3rd November 2007