The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History

The 1756 Trial of Captain Kimber: A Slave Ship Captain Convicted of Murder

8 min · 10. juni 2026
episode The 1756 Trial of Captain Kimber: A Slave Ship Captain Convicted of Murder cover

Description

In January 1756, Captain John Kimber of the slave ship Recovery was tried at the Old Bailey for the murder of a 15-year-old enslaved girl. Kimber had ordered her flogged for refusing to eat, and she died days later. The prosecution was brought by Granville Sharp, who used the case to challenge the legal status of the slave trade. The trial became a cause célèbre in London, revealing the brutality of the Middle Passage to a public that had rarely seen it so starkly. This episode explores the evidence presented in court—the testimony of sailors, the condition of the slave ship, and the competing narratives of 'discipline' versus 'murder.' We also examine why Kimber was acquitted, and how the case influenced the growing abolitionist movement in Britain. Sharp's loss in court turned into a propaganda victory, as he published a detailed account that horrified readers and fueled demands for reform. A pivotal moment in the legal and moral battle against the slave trade, often overshadowed by later victories. #CaptainKimber #RecoverySlaveShip #GranvilleSharp #OldBailey #MurderTrial #MiddlePassure #SlaveTrade #Abolition #1756 #London #18thCentury #BritishHistory #LegalHistory #EnslavedGirl #Flogging #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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141 episodes

episode The Middle Passage: Below Decks on a Slave Ship artwork

The Middle Passage: Below Decks on a Slave Ship

In this episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade, Lucas and Luna descend into the hellish reality of the Middle Passage. Drawing on slave ship logs, surgeon's journals, and the testimony of Olaudah Equiano, they explore the brutal logistics of human cargo: how captains packed their holds, the arithmetic of profit and cruelty, the constant threat of disease and rebellion, and the psychological terror that defined the crossing. They examine the slave ship Brookes diagram that shocked Britain, the infamous roll of the slave ship Zong, and the little-known 1734 slave revolt aboard the Rhode Island sloop Little George. Lucas explains why the slave ship was a factory designed to break the will, and how enslaved people found ways to resist in the most constrained space imaginable. This episode offers a granular look at the central horror of the Atlantic slave trade — the Atlantic crossing itself. #MiddlePassage #SlaveShip #AtlanticSlaveTrade #OlaudahEquiano #BrookesDiagram #ZongMassacre #LittleGeorge #SlaveRevoltAtSea #ThomasClarkson #SlaveShipLogistics #18thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #Resistance #Disease #HumanCargo #Abolition #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6. juli 20268 min
episode The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty artwork

The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty

In this episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering, Lucas and Luna examine the 1781 Zong massacre — not as a random act of brutality but as a cold insurance calculation. The slave ship Zong, overcrowded and off-course, saw 133 enslaved Africans thrown alive into the sea so that the ship's owners could claim insurance for 'lost cargo.' When the case reached London courts, Lord Mansfield ruled on property law, not murder. Lucas unpacks the voyage's chronology: Captain Luke Collingwood's decision, the crew's testimony, the legal arguments over jettison and 'perils of the sea.' He connects the Zong to the growing British abolition movement, explaining how Granville Sharp used the case to galvanise public outrage. The episode explores the specific legal doctrine of 'general average' as applied to enslaved people, and how this atrocity, stripped of euphemism, became a rallying cry for abolitionists like Equiano and Clarkson. Listeners will learn about the Gregson v. Gilbert insurance case, the role of the Liverpool slave trade syndicates, and the grisly arithmetic that priced human life at thirty pounds per head. #ZongMassacre #SlaveShipZong #LukeCollingwood #GranvilleSharp #LordMansfield #GeneralAverage #InsuranceFraud #AtlanticSlaveTrade #AbolitionMovement #MiddlePassage #LiverpoolSlaveTrade #GregsonvGilbert #OlaudahEquiano #ThomasClarkson #1781 #History #FexingoHistory #PowerfulHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday8 min
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The Man Who Sank the Atlantic Slave Trade: Granville Sharp

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Yesterday7 min
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In November 1841, the American slave ship Creole departed Richmond, Virginia, bound for New Orleans with 135 enslaved people aboard. Off the coast of North Carolina, 19 captives led by Madison Washington — who had escaped to Canada only to be recaptured — seized control of the brig, killing one crewman and forcing the captain to sail to Nassau in the Bahamas. British authorities in Nassau, operating under the 1833 Emancipation Act, refused American demands for the return of the 128 people who gained freedom. The incident ignited a diplomatic crisis between the United States and Britain, inflamed sectional tensions over slavery and maritime law, and became a rallying point for abolitionists like Frederick Douglass, who later called the Creole affair 'a victory for the oppressed.' This episode explores the rebellion itself, the legal battle over the enslaved refugees, and the lasting impact on US-British relations and the domestic slavery debate. We also discuss how the revolt challenged the delicate balance of power between slave and free states in the antebellum era. #CreoleRebellion #MadisonWashington #1841 #SlaveRevolt #Nassau #Bahamas #CoastwiseSlaveTrade #AmericanSlavery #Abolition #FrederickDouglass #USBritainRelations #WebsterAshburton #Antebellum #MaritimeHistory #SlaveShip #BlackResistance #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4. juli 20266 min
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In December 1831, a 25,000-strong enslaved workforce in Jamaica's western parishes rose up in what became the largest slave rebellion in the British Caribbean. At its heart was Samuel 'Sam' Sharpe, a literate, Baptist deacon who believed the British Parliament had already granted emancipation—and that the planters were withholding it. Sharpe organized a peaceful general strike for better wages, which spiraled into a full-scale revolt after plantation owners responded with force. The rebellion burned over 200 estates, terrified the white minority, and was brutally crushed by martial law. Over 300 enslaved people were executed, including Sharpe himself, who gave a famous speech from the gallows. Yet the uprising—known as the Baptist War—shocked the British public and directly accelerated the passage of the 1833 Slavery Abolition Act. This episode examines Sharpe's leadership, the role of Black Baptist preachers, and how one man's faith and strategy turned a Christmas strike into a revolution that ended slavery in the British Empire. #SamSharpe #BaptistWar #Jamaica #SlaveRevolt #1831 #ChristmasRebellion #Abolition #SlaveryAbolitionAct #BaptistMissionaries #WilliamKnibb #MontegoBay #MartialLaw #EnslavedResistance #BritishCaribbean #BlackHistory #FexingoHistory #History #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4. juli 20265 min