Tuesday, May 25, 2021

British Empire was single biggest buyer of African slaves in late 1700s-early 1800s, bought new African slaves to make them soldiers in West Indies regiments to protect UK Caribbean sugar plantation profits

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"By the end of the 18th century, the British army was the single biggest purchaser of slaves." (at 1:50 on video, Forces News). Added: “In the 1790s the British Government was the largest purchaser of captured Africans. Between 1795-1808 (the very eve of abolition) they paid for 13,400 Africans for West India regiments."

"To protect Britain's lucrative sugar plantations on the islands, 13,400 African slaves were purchased for its West India Regiments between 1795 and 1807. "White soldiers, unused to the region's climate, regularly fell ill, leaving garrisons dangerously undermanned. This led to the decision to buy African slaves to fill those gaps."

10/29/2020, "West India Regiments: The Story Of Slavery In The Army" forces.net, R. Laydon

"Estimates suggest around 13,400 slaves were purchased for the West India Regiments between the years 1795 and 1807.

Towards the end of the 18th century, the British Army was charged with protecting new and lucrative interests in the Caribbean.

The islands of Jamaica, Barbados, Dominica, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Trinidad and Tobago became known as the British West Indies, known for their sugar plantations....

White soldiers, unused to the region's climate, regularly fell ill, leaving garrisons dangerously undermanned.

This led to the decision to buy African slaves to fill those gaps.

When the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act of 1807 was passed, as many as 50% of Army regiments in the Caribbean included slaves.

The National Army Museum's archive in London holds official documents containing details about the formation of the West India Regiments.

"The records available tell us that the [British] Army purchased about 13,400 slaves for these regiments [between 1795 and 1807] at the cost around £1 million," says Jasdeep Singh, the Research Curator at the National Army Museum.

"Looking at various years, it averages around £70 for the cost of one single slave.

"What the British soldiers didn't realise is that there were mosquitos carrying around Yellow Fever and a variety of tropical diseases.

"From Britain, there were policies sent,...'Here are some supplies, here are some funds, go and purchase new Africans'--so purchase Africans from Africa, as slaves, and then recruit them into the West India Regiments."...

In the years after the slave trade was abolished, the role of those soldiers changed from having to protect colonial assets, to serving overseas....

After first being raised in 1795 to support Britain's presence in the Caribbean, the West India Regiments remained a part of the Army until 1927, and at one point was comprised of 12 different regiments.

The unit was briefly re-formed in 1958, before being permanently disbanded four years later."...images above from forces.net

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Second source:

2016,A Voyage around the Slave Ports of Britain,” Nigel Pocock

[Image: West Indies]

“In the 1790s the British Government was the largest purchaser of captured Africans. Between 1795-1808 (the very eve of abolition) they paid for 13,400 Africans for West India regiments, at the then enormous cost of £925,000. These deals were concealed in an unaudited account called ‘Army Extraordinaries. In 1806 the Government negotiated (with Dawson of Liverpool) for between 2,000--4,000 captured Africans ‘...of the tribes of the [African] Gold Coast...before the act [sic] takes effect.’ In the 12 months before the Abolition Act took effect (ending 1st March, 1808), the British Government purchased 1,000 Africans for the military....

Around 50-60 MPs had holdings in the West Indies, or commercial interests there in the 1820s. The West India lobby was the most powerful single interest group in the [House of] commons. Sir Thomas Johnson, MP, mayor of Liverpool, was partly responsible for one of the first slave ships, the ironically named Blessing, to leave his city.

 
[Image: African slaves on British ship, schoolhistory.org.uk]

In 1788, there were more than 60 West India merchants in the [House of]  Commons, mostly merchants in London.

[The term “West India merchants” is a UK euphemism for "slave traders."]

“Britain was unique among the slaving nations, in that policy was the direct result of Parliament, and especially the Board of Trade.

Parliament authorised the West India Dock Company. The chairman was George Hibbert, a slave merchant, who was also the driving force behind the West India Docks."...

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Third source: Britain bought African slaves to fight in Caribbean wars against France, 1795-1807:

"Slave or Freedman: The Question of the Legal Status of the British West India Soldier, 1795-1807


 

 

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Friday, May 7, 2021

Trump comes full circle, leaving no sign he was ever president. In 2016 we mistakenly thought he wanted to help the country by defeating the vicious GOP Establishment and Karl Rove. In 2020 Trump's campaign accepted $2.5 million from Karl Rove's PAC

Is Donald Trump planning to return the $2,529,979 his 2020 re-election campaign accepted from Karl Rove’s American Crossroads?

On March 4, 2021, Trump said: “If the Republican Party is going to be successful, they’re going to have to stop dealing with the likes of Karl Rove and just let him float away, or retire.”…”Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America,” donaldjtrump.com

Below, screen shot, American Crossroads, “Targeted Candidates, 2020 Cycle," opensecrets.org:

Donald Trump, President, $2,529,969, Lost”

This doesn’t even get into the question of why Trump would accept one penny from Karl Rove since Trump’s 2016 defeat of Karl Rove was the most astounding and meaningful political accomplishment in history. Andrew Breitbart actually worked himself to death trying to do it. As if it were a kleenex, Trump simply discarded the earth shattering results of his 2016 election and put Karl Rove back in power: 11/10/2012, Celebrity real estate developer Donald Trump taunted on Twitter: “Congrats to @KarlRove on blowing $400 million this cycle. Every race @CrossroadsGPS ran ads in, the Republicans lost. What a waste of money.”...The single miraculous gift Trump gave the country in 2016--which was not defeating a democrat--was defeating the cancerous GOP Establishment led by Karl Rove. But Trump overturned his own election and reinstated Rove. Today it’s as if Trump never existed. Rove is back in charge preventing the country from having an opposition party to open borders, thus gagging Republican voters. Open borders will never be on the ballot so Republican voters are disenfranchised. Trump obviously wasn’t the answer either. Candidate Trump turned out to be the exact opposite of Pres. Trump. Which explains why Karl Rove is back in charge. Trump’s years of published complaints about Rove are obviously a waste of time.

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Added: 11/10/2012, “At the center of the wreckage stands Karl Rove, the GOP strategist and supposed dark genius….Celebrity real estate developer Donald Trump taunted on Twitter: “Congrats to @KarlRove on blowing $400 million this cycle. Every race @CrossroadsGPS ran ads in, the Republicans lost. What a waste of money.”…11/10/2012

Nov. 10, 2012, "Karl Rove and his super PAC vow to press on," Washington Post, Karen Tumulty

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As Rove sees it, the campaign proved that American Crossroads and its more secretive issue-advocacy arm, Crossroads GPS — which allows donors to remain anonymous — are here to stay.Rove is pondering new missions for Crossroads to address weaknesses laid bare by the GOP’s back-to-back failures to win the White House and the fact that the party fell short when expected to win back the Senate….Crossroads also is likely to invest more deeply in organizations such as the Republican State Leadership Committee, which has [allegedly] been trying to build a more appealing GOP farm team by, among other things, recruiting Hispanic candidates to run for state-level office….For Crossroads, 2012 was a $300 million learning experience.The failure of Crossroads to live up to expectations is not the only thing that has put Rove back into the news and revived the intrigue that surrounds a man whose seen and unseen hand works in so many places in politics….Rove’s is the most famous name associated with Crossroads, but he said he receives no money from it, not even travel expenses, for his work as a strategist and fundraiser. Its day-to-day operations are run by its president, Steven Law.

Outside their circle, many of the performance reviews have been scathing.

The Sunlight Foundation, which tracks money in politics, calculated that only 6 percent of Crossroads money went to winners; by comparison, the Service Employees International Union, an old war horse of Democratic politics, had a 70 percent victory rate.

Celebrity real estate developer Donald Trump taunted on Twitter: “Congrats to @KarlRove on blowing $400 million this cycle. Every race @CrossroadsGPS ran ads in, the Republicans lost. What a waste of money.”…

The idea for Crossroads was born shortly after the 2008 election, when Rove wrote a column for the Wall Street Journal lamenting the fact that the Republicans had no equivalent to the alliance of organized labor and liberal interest groups that had spent $194 million on independent advertising for Democrats during the previous two years.

The next day, Rove recalled, he heard from former Republican chairman Ed Gillespie, who said, “Great idea. What are we going to do about it?”

As they talked to potential donors, Rove said, they realized “there was just a generalized sense that too much of this kind of activity was basically of, by and for the consultants. Donors said, ‘Consultants set these things up, pay a commission to fundraisers, hire themselves to do the work and pay themselves too much.’ ”

“Major donors said, ‘We write checks to these groups, but we’re not enthusiastic, given how they are going about their business,’ ” Rove said.

He and Gillespie also began sounding out the Senate Republican leadership, which recommended Law, a former aide to Republican leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), to run it. The two talked him into the job, though it meant that Law had to leave a far more lucrative post as general counsel at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce….

Rove boasts that Crossroads remains an efficient operation….

And his wealthy donors? They all went into this eyes wide open, Rove said, “and their attitude is, beat them next time.””

 

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