William James (slave trader)

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Painting of a slave ship showing enslaved people chained up below deck.

William James (1735–1798) was an English slave trader, plantation owner and slave owner.[1][2]

Slavers collecting enslaved people off the coast of Africa; drawing by Édouard Duncan.
Slave shackles.

William James was responsible for at least 144 slave voyages. He was active in the years between 1758 and 1778 from the Port of Liverpool.[2]

Slave owner

A sugar plantation in the Caribbean where enslaved people were forced to work.

William James owned enslaved people on three plantations in Jamaica: Cambridge Pen, Clifton Hill, and Malborough Mount.[1]

Personal life

William James was the grandfather of a 19th-century member of parliament for Carlisle, who was also called William James. William James (the slave trader) left his grandson plantations with their enslaved people and financial wealth in his will.[3]

Sailor riot

References

Sources

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