Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Hugh Crow, Slave-Ship Captain

Hugh Crow approved of the regulation of the slave-trade. However, he rejected the criticism of William Wilberforce: "His proposition... that badges should be worn by African captains, who toiled at the risk of their lives for the accommodation of our colonies, and that he and others might enjoy their ease at home, was impertinent as well as ungracious; and his regulation that captains should land their cargoes without losing a certain number of black slaves, was absolutely ridiculous. Not a word was said about the white slaves, the poor sailors; these might die without regret.... And with respect to the insinuation thrown out, in this country, that African captains sometimes threw their slaves overboard, it is unworthy of notice, for it goes to impute an absolute disregard of self interest, as well as of all humanity. In the African trade, as in all others, there were individuals bad as well as good, and it is but justice to discriminate, and not condemn the whole for the delinquencies of a few."

According to his biographer, Elizabeth Baigent: "On 25 August 1793, during a twelve-month period of leave between June 1793 and June 1794, he married Mary Hall, with whom he had a son, born in May 1794. On his fourth slaving voyage, later in 1794, as chief mate of the Gregson, he was captured by the French and spent a year as a prisoner in France, eventually escaping disguised as a Breton by speaking Manx."

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/REcrow.htm

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