Date: Thu, 14 Apr 1994 18:35:45 -0600 From: hernan@cc.gatech.edu (Hernan Astudillo R.) Subject: New Database on Slave Trade > Sender: Latin American History discussion list > From: Phil Mueller > Subject: New Database on Slave Trade > > From: "John Saillant, IEAHCNET" > Subject: New Database on Slave Trade > > Research Note on the Atlantic Slave Trade Database Project > > [This note comes courtesy of the following two IEAHCNET > subscribers--JS] > > Stephen D. Behrendt, Drake University, sb4331r@acad.drake.edu > David Eltis, Queen's University, eltisd@qucdn.queensu.ca > > In 1993 the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research > at Harvard University received a grant from the National Endowment > for the Humanities to create a consolidated database on the Atlantic > slave trade. The aim of the project is to computerize voyage data > on most of the slave voyages that sailed from Africa to the Americas > from the sixteenth century to the 1860's. The core data will consist > of over 200 fields of information, including fields for the names > of vessels, captains and shipowners, regions and dates of trade > in Europe, Africa and the Americas, and the number, age and gender > of slaves confined on the Middle Passage. When the project is completed > in three to five years, data on the Atlantic slave trade will be > available through computer networking services such as Internet. > > The first stage of the project established fields of information and > integrated numerous computerized data-sets of Atlantic slave voyages > that historians have compiled over the past twenty-five years. > These sets include: Herbert S. Klein on the slave trades to Havana > (1790-1820), Rio de Janeiro (1795-1811) and Virginia (1727-1769), and > the Angola slave trade (1723-1771); Svend E. Green-Pedersen on the > Danish slave trade (1698-1789); David Eltis on the Atlantic slave > trade (1811-1867); and Johannes Postma on the Dutch slave trade > (1675-1802). > > The second stage of the project will computerize published and > unpublished sets of slave voyage data compiled by Jean Mettas > (French slave trade), Jay Coughtry (Rhode Island slave trade), > James Rawley and Joseph Inikori (British slave trades), and then > will integrate several new British slave trade data-sets > created by Stephen D. Behrendt, David Eltis and David Richardson. > Well over half of all transatlantic slave voyages--including the > majority of British, French and Dutch slave voyages--soon will be > recorded in machine-readable format. > > The major tasks in the project are the matching of fields of > information created from widely different sources often for > different purposes, and the elimination of duplicate voyages. > When completed, the core set of more than 20,000 transatlantic > slave voyages will constitute the largest data source for the > long-distance movement of peoples before the twentieth century. > Refined demographic data on the volume of the trade (and thus of > pre-colonial African populations) and the spatial distribution > of African peoples throughout the Atlantic world will allow scholars > to assess more accurately questions of African state formation, > agricultural and ecological change, African cultural survivals, > and the development of the Atlantic economies. Sub-sets of > information on vessel tonnage, slave age/gender ratios, and > crew/slave mortality will permit a more thorough analysis of shipping > productivity, patterns of family structures, and disease transmission > in the Atlantic world. > > The database has been organized so that additional information on slave > voyages can be added easily to the set and so that related information, > such as African climatic patterns, slave phenotypes, slave rebellions, > or slave prices, can be linked to the main data-set through a > common variable such as the vessel name or the voyage identification > number. Building related files will broaden the scope of analysis > from the slave voyage to the impact of the transatlantic slave trade > in the creation of the modern world. Indeed, it eventually may > be possible to relate individual Africans or groups of Africans to > the vessel from which they disembarked in the Americas, as has > been done with other migrant groups. > > The project organizers welcome additional data on transatlantic > slave voyages to include in the consolidated data-set. > > -- | Hernan Astudillo R. | "Computers are useless. They can only give you hernan@cc.gatech.edu | answers." -- Pablo Picasso College of Computing, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332 / (404) 853-9390