Barbados Negroes

In 1843, 123 enslaved African(s) were “liberated” in a state-run scheme usually resulting in involuntary indentures, conscription, or re-enslavement. Under the jurisdiction of 4, Case ID LA-E-433 occurred via the British and Netherlands Court of Mixed Commission, Paramaribo

Case Details
RegID LA-E-433
Case Name Barbados Negroes
Year 1843
Government Department Courts of Mixed Commission
Court British and Netherlands Court of Mixed Commission, Paramaribo
Trial Outcome Condemned
Enslaved Total 123
Liberated Africans Total 123
Registered Total 0
Notes By 1847, the Dutch government freed the 29 slaves of La Nueve de Snauw who were still alive, their 10 relatives (they had married since 1823), and 417 "kidnapped Africans" of other illegal slave ships, most especially the French vessel La Légère, most of whom were able to escape before the vessel had been turned over to a French court. Finally, the British judges wanted the liberation of the "Barbados Negroes" - in general, those enslaved people who had come with (or without) their English masters to the Dutch colony just before emancipation in 1833.
Sources Nationaal Archief, Nederland, Archief van de Commissie tot de Zaken der Nieuwe Wees-, Curatele- en Onbeheerde Boedelkamer en haar Opvolgers, 1.05.11.13/521A, "Generale sterkte der Gouvernements slaven," 1 Jan. 1833, (no folio numbers in this volume); Pieter C. Emmer, “Abolition of the Abolished: The Illegal Dutch Slave Trade and the Mixed Courts,” in David Eltis, and James Walvin, eds., The Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Origins and Effects in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1981), 184.
Cite as
Event Details
X Capture
Y Capture
Ship Status Unknown
Date of departure from a place or port in Africa generally following the purchase of enslaved people. Include YYYY-MM-DD, if known.
Region of departure from Africa. Required entry. For more information about the geographical hierarchy used in this digital resource, please refer to AfricanRegions.org. West Africa (unspecified)
Place or port of departure from Africa, if known. A controlled vocabulary for place names are associated with geographic coordinates using Google Maps Global Mercator EPSG:900913. See https://epsg.io/transform#s_srs=4326&t_srs=900913&x=NaN&y=NaN A Coruña
Capture date at sea or on land, if known. Date of the sentence. Include YYYY-MM-DD, if known.
Location
Navy
Ship
Captain
Supporting Ships
Sentence Date
Date of arrival to the place where the trial, purchase, or asylum occurred, resulting in "liberation" and indenture. Includes YYYY-MM-DD, if known.
Region of arrival around the world. Required field. For more information about the geographical hierarchy used in this digital resource, please refer to AfricanRegions.org. Other regions outside of Africa include, Western Europe, East Coast of North America, etc. North Coast South America
Place or port of arrival around the world. Required field. A controlled vocabulary for place names are associated with geographic coordinates using Google Maps Global Mercator EPSG:900913. See https://epsg.io/transform#s_srs=4326&t_srs=900913&x=NaN&y=NaN Paramaribo
List of Source

No primary sources available for this case yet.