Tuesday 30 October 2012

Irish in the French slave trade

For a description of the Irish in the Caribbean

 http://www.amazon.com/Hell-Barbados-Ethnic-Cleansing-Ireland/dp/0863222870/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1363101383&sr=1-1&keywords=to+hell+or+barbados

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It struck me that the Claddagh ring, was probably made using Peruvian silver. Paid for with the profits of the slave trade. If you have ever seen the TV series Angel. Angel's father is a Galway man.  A wealthy merchant dealing in silks. I presume these silks are either paid for with profits from slaves, or sold on to slave owners. 


H/T the Journal.


THE IRISH HOLD a unique place in the history of the trans-Atlantic slave
trade, white Europeans who were both slaves and slavers, depending on which way
the political and economic winds were blowing from the seventeenth century
onward.
> Transported to the West Indies as indentured labour after the Cromwellian
conquest or enthusiastically profiting from the inhuman triangular trade between
Europe, Africa and the Sugar Islands, cast as victims and villains as
circumstances changed. And over two two centuries of the Atlantic slave trade,
Irish merchants, seamen and financiers built vast dynastic fortunes at home and
abroad.
> The many Haitians and West Indians who trace their ancestry back to Africans
transported on Irish-owned slave ships are living proof that the Irish have not
always been the victims of history.
> And it was the Irish slaving clans of Nantes in France, descendants of the
Wild Geese, who effectively ran the trade in humans for the French nobility.
> One Irish soldier turned pirate and saver, Philip Walsh of Ballynacooly in the
Walsh Mountains in Co Kilkenny, was present at the signing of the Treaty of
Limerick on 3 October 1691, which marked the end of the Williamite War and the
scattering of thousands of exiled Irish soldiers and commanders across the sea
to the continent or west to North America.
> "A personal taxi service for the Stuarts"
> Walsh senior, together with his son Antoine, commanded the ship that carried
the defeated King James II from Kinsale in Co Cork to France after the Battle of
the Boyne. The family were a sort of personal taxi service for the Stuarts
during their ill-fated adventures: Philip's son Antoine Vincent was the
owner/operator of the armed frigate Doutelle, the ship that landed Charles
Stuart, James II's son and the `Young Pretender', in Scotland in 1745 in his
doomed bid for the throne.
> Philip had settled in St Malo in Brittany (where Anthony or Antoine was born
on 22 January 1703) and looked at start-up opportunities in the burgeoning
Atlantic slave trade. Philip Walsh was a shipbuilder, merchant and at times a
daring and ruthless privateer or licensed pirate for the French crown, with free
rein to attack and capture British shipping in the English Channel while the two
great European powers were at war. He sailed fast, heavily-armed, but relatively
small ships such as Le Curieux under letters of marque from the French crown.
> Philip Walsh would venture far in search of a prize, on one occasion taking
two ships, the Ruby and Diligent into the Indian Ocean and on another, sailing
Le Curieux around Africa and to the mouth of the Red Sea to attack Dutch-owned
coffee stores in Moka in the Yemen. On that raid against the largest coffee
market on the coast of Arabia, the Irish corsair captain plundered an estimated
1,500 tonnes of the highest quality coffee beans. Philip, who married an Irish
woman called Anne White and had ten children, died on a later voyage to Africa.
> It was left to one of his sons, Antoine to get the real family business –
slaving – off the ground.
>

> By the early 1700s, the French port of Nantes, with a large, close-knit and
hard-working Irish slave-trading community, became the chief slaving port for
the kingdom of Louis XIV, the Sun King. It was said that half of the ships that
sailed out of Nantes at the time were owned or stocked by Irish merchant
families, including the Joyces, Walshes, MacCarthys, O'Sheils, Sarsfields and
O'Riordans. Manufactured goods, guns, textiles, liquor and knives, were brought
from Nantes to the Slave Coast, exchanged for slaves who were transported to the
French colonies of Guadeloupe, Martinique and Saint-Domingue (modern Haiti)
where they were sold for sugar and tobacco, which then returned to Europe.
> The Irish merchants built fine homes on the ÃŽle Feydeau, which still stand
today, but the profits were spread far beyond Nantes: they made fortunes for the
ports of Bristol, Liverpool and Amsterdam. To their great credit, the merchants
of Belfast, under the future United Irishman William Putnam McCabe, refused to
take part in the inhuman slave trade. However, the merchant princes of Cork,
Limerick and Waterford profited by victualling the ships, feeding the slavers
and slaves alike to great reward and family fortune. Huge family fortunes were
built in Cork, the city centre was rebuilt and some of those dynasties that were
built on the backs and bellies of millions of slaves are still with us today.
And so it went on for decades, with the wealth of nations and Empires built up
on unimaginable human misery.
> Antoine Walsh was, until he was comfortable enough to retire to an office job
on land, a slave ship captain. The voyage, from France to East Africa and then
across the Atlantic to the Caribbean, was long and perilous and those making it
faced everything from disease and foul weather to the possibility of piracy and
mutinous human cargoes.
> "From slave-ship captain to slave merchant"
> By the early 1730s, Walsh had seen enough of the disease ridden coast of East
Africa and the dangers of the middle passage and promoted himself from
slave-ship captain to slave merchant.
> Antoine had been lucky enough to avoid the bloody below-decks uprisings that
claimed the lives of many slavers, including some of his employees and
relatives. In 1734, the slave ship L'Aventurier, outfitted by Walsh's
father-in-law Luc O'Shiell (a former Jacobite officer), spent nearly four months
moving up and down the West African coast, looking for slaves.
> At Ouida (also called `Whydah' by the slavers) on the coast of Benin, the
captain (a J. Shaughnessy) went ashore to trade, leaving Barnaby O'Shiell,
Antoine's teenage brother-in-law, in command of a crew laid low by fever and
dysentery. The slaves took their chance and broke free, cutting the
barely-conscious pilot's throat and locking the other invalid sailors below
hatches. It was up to young Barnaby to rally the five sailors who could carry a
gun and in the ensuing fight to regain the ship; two crewmen and forty slaves
were killed. In commercial terms, they had lost one-sixth of the cargo and
Captain Shaughnessy was forced to tie up at Ouida until he had collected 480
native men, women and children to transport in chains to Saint-Domingue and
Martinique. Both Barnaby and Shaughnessy survived to have careers as slaver
captains for Antoine.
> Antoine Walsh would suffer a major setback after 1748 when he attempted to
monopolise the French-East African slave trade – his business rivals forced him
out and he left France to manage the family slave plantations in Sainte Domingue
(Haiti), where he died in 1763.
> Ten years earlier, in 1753, Antoine had been enobled by King Louis XV of
France and the family estates on the lower Loire were consolidated by Royal
letters-patent into the "Comte de Serrant." The Walshes were henceforth Comtes
de Serrant.
> The exiled Irishman had personally bought and sold over 12,000 African slaves
and launched 40 cross-Atlantic slave voyages. He was the greatest – or worst –
of the Irish-Nantes slavers, far outstripping rivals such as the O'Riordan
brothers, Etienne and Laurent, who had family back in Derryvoe, Co Cork. The
Roches, originally from Limerick, where their extended clan included Arthurs and
Suttons, managed a mere 11 slave voyages with around 3,000 slaves.


This article was published in the Journal.ie

In the sleeping under the cross universe. The main characters all support slavery. Hugh may own some slaves. Part of his inheritance, from Karoline.  Juan despises slaves. Mirroring the Irish immigrants conflict with African Americans in the US




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