ABSTRACT

First Published in 1990. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

chapter |20 pages

Southern Politics and Attempts to Reopen The African Slave Trade *

ByPaul Finkelman

chapter |14 pages

How Extensive Was The Border State Slave Trade? A New Look

ByWilliam Calderhead

chapter |27 pages

Epidemiology and the Slave Trade

ByPhilip D. Curtin

chapter |12 pages

Discussion:Measuring The Atlantic Slave Trade

ByPaul Finkelman

chapter |26 pages

The Elusive Guineamen: Newport Slavers, 1735–1774

BySarah Deutsch

chapter |12 pages

The Enforcement of the Slave-Trade Laws

ByW. E. B. Du Bois

chapter |15 pages

The Geographical Origins of Negro Slaves in Colonial South Carolina

ByW. Robert Higgins

chapter |22 pages

Measuring The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Rejoinder By J. E. Inikori

ByPaul Finkelman

chapter |17 pages

The Journal of Negro History

Vol. IX—January, 1924—No. 1
ByPaul Finkelman

chapter |10 pages

The Case Against A Nineteenth-Century Cuba-Florida Slave Trade

ByKenneth F. Kiple

chapter |30 pages

The Volume of The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Synthesis 1

ByPaul E. Lovejoy

chapter |10 pages

The Making of the Triangular Trade Myth

ByGilman M. Ostrander

chapter |18 pages

The Movement To Reopen The African Slave Trade In South Carolina

ByRonald Takabe

chapter |9 pages

The Foreign Slave Trade in Louisiana After 1808 *

ByJoe G. Taylor

chapter |30 pages

The Fishers of Men: The Profits of the Slave Trade

ByPaul Finkelman

chapter |17 pages

Black Immigrants: The Slave Trade in Colonial Maryland

ByDarold D. Wax