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The US Slave Trade took place in the 1700's. It involved 3 major stops to get various items from each continent. It stopped in England to acquire guns and other weapons. It then went to West Africa and boarded the ships with many African American Slaves. They then shipped them across the Atlantic to the 13 Colonies where they would work the fields. The ships then took many crops back to England.
In 1700 a slave was sold for £20. In 1800 a slave was sold for £35.
In the space of just 46 years, the British government outlawed the slave trade that Britain had created and went on to abolish the practice of slavery throughout the colonies. British anti-slavery was one of the most important reform movements of the 19th century. But its history is not without ironies. During the course of the 18th century the British perfected the Atlantic slave system. Indeed, it has been estimated that between 1700 and 1810 British merchants transported almost three million Africans across the Atlantic. That the British benefited from the Atlantic slave system is indisputable. Yet, paradoxically, it was also the British who led the struggle to bring this system to an end.
The East African slave trade in the 1600s was operated within Africa, Europe, and Asia, while the Atlantic slave trade in the 1700s also included the Americas.
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Mami papa someone did not do there homework
In the 1700s, more slaves from West Africa were sent to the Caribbean than to South America. In the 1800s, about the same amount of slaves were sent from West Africa to both places.
Royal African Company
sugar
african states became too weak to resist the slave trade
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Voltaire.
Fishing, ship building, and the slave trade
Lumber trading and Tobacco were very profitable at the time. Also farming and slave trade was key.
The Middle Passage. It was used by English sailors in the 1700's to take slave west across the Atlantic ocean.