The Last Survivor Of A Slave Ship Has Been Identified (and Her Story Is Remarkable!)

MarcATL

Diamond Member
Aug 12, 2009
39,433
18,751
1,590
She Survived a Slave Ship, the Civil War and the Depression. Her Name Was Redoshi.

Redoshi, who was known as Sally Smith after she became enslaved, with her husband, called Uncle Billy or Yawith.Credit via Shirley Quarles
01xp-slavetrade-articleLarge.jpg


By Sandra E. Garcia April 3, 2019

It has long been believed that a man named Cudjo Lewis was the last living survivor of the trans-Atlantic slave trade in the United States. Now a researcher at Newcastle University in Britain says she has discovered testimony from someone who may have lived even longer — a woman named Redoshi.

The new findings, published last week in the journal Slavery & Abolition, are likely to be subject to scholarly debate, because there are few records documenting the lives of the last Africans to be captured and brought to the United States on slave ships.

Regardless of Redoshi’s precise historical status, the researcher, Hannah Durkin, has pieced together accounts from different sources and census records to carve out the remarkable life of a woman who survived the treacherous Middle Passage voyage at age 12, was sold as a child bride, and lived through the Civil War and the Great Depression. According to Dr. Durkin, Redoshi died in 1937; Lewis died in 1935.

Any USMBers planning on getting this book, the history buffs perhaps?
 
If Trump has accomplished anything positive, he has revealed once and for all how slavery and genocide poisoned the American economy long before America was born, and the extent to which many Americans are still cursed by their toxic legacy today.

Historical Context: Was Slavery the Engine of American Economic Growth? | Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

"Did slavery create the capital that financed the industrial revolution?

"The answer is 'no'; slavery did not create a major share of the capital that financed the European industrial revolution.

"The combined profits of the slave trade and West Indian plantations did not add up to five percent of Britain's national income at the time of the industrial revolution.

"Nevertheless, slavery was indispensable to European development of the New World. It is inconceivable that European colonists could have settled and developed North and South America and the Caribbean without slave labor.

"Moreover, slave labor did produce the major consumer goods that were the basis of world trade during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries: coffee, cotton, rum, sugar, and tobacco."
 

Forum List

Back
Top