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The Zong

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The Zong Study the list of key words, dates and names. How many can you accurately complete? a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 180 _ 18 _ 3 p _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _t m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ o ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Zong


1
The Zong
2
  • Study the list of key words, dates and names.
    How many can you accurately complete?
  • a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
  • 180 _
  • 18 _ 3
  • p _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _t
  • m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
  • _ o _ _
  • _ a _ _ i _ _
  • c _ _ _ _ _ _ w _ _ _ _
  • f _ _ _ _
  • _ _ _ _ r _ _ _ e
  • _ _
  • m _ _ _ _ _
  • q _ _ _ _ _ _
  • p _ _ _ _ _ _ n

3
AIMS To examine the case of the slave ship
Zong and the impact it had on the growing
abolitionist movement.
  • Success Criteria
  • You can describe what happened on board the Zong
  • You can evaluate the impact it had on the
    abolitionist campaign.

4
Case Study The Zong
  • On 6th September 1781 the slave ship Zong sailed
    from Africa to Jamaica. There were 17 crew and
    442 slaves on board.
  • By November 7 of the crew and 60 of the slaves
    had died, many more of the slaves were ill, and
    the ships captain, Luke Collingwood, knew he
    would be unable to sell them.

5
THE PLAN
  • The captain, along with the other officers,
    agreed a monstrous plan to kill the sick slaves
    and claim compensation from the ships insurance
    company for loss of cargo.
  • The plan was to claim that the ship was running
    out of water and in order to save some of the
    slaves the sick ones had to be thrown overboard.
  • Over the next few days at least 133 sick slaves
    some chained together, were thrown overboard.
  • On 1st December 42 slaves were thrown overboard
    but the next day it rained and when the Zong
    docked in Jamaica on the 22nd it had 191 slaves
    and 420 gallons of fresh water left.

6
Key Terms
  • There was huge debate about which crime Luke
    Collingwood deserved to be charged with
  • Murder to intentionally kill a person
  • Manslaughter the crime of killing a person when
    the person did not intend to do it
  • Fraud the crime of getting money by deceiving
    people.

7
  • The Ships owners claimed 30 for each dead
    slave, the insurance for the lost cargo, on the
    grounds that the ship had run out of water so
    some slaves had to be killed in order to save the
    crew and other slaves.
  • The insurance company refused to pay and accused
    the ships owners of fraud and the case went to
    court.
  • The owners lawyer said what is all this talk
    of human people being thrown overboard? This is
    a case of goods. It is a case about throwing
    over of goods. They (the slaves) are goods and
    property
  • The Judge decided the insurers had to
  • pay up.

8
Influence on the abolitionist movement
  • Brief reports of the case appeared in newspapers
    but, at first, it had very little effect on
    public opinion.
  • The anti-slavery campaigner Granville Sharp
    tried, unsuccessfully, to have the ship's crew
    prosecuted for murder.
  • He wrote to men in high positions in politics,
    the law, the Church, anyone of influence about
    the Zong case. Sharp was determined to expose the
    killings in the hope of ending slavery itself.
    Few bothered to reply.

9
  • However, Sharp did have some success.
  • He sent an account of the Zong massacre to
    William Dillwyn, a Quaker, and shortly after,
    in 1783, the first anti slavery petition, signed
    by 273 Quakers, was submitted to parliament.
  • Key Word Petition
  • A document signed by a large number
  • of people demanding action from the
  • government.
  • In the following years, the case was referred to
    time and again when men wrote about the slave
    trade . The Zong killings offered a powerful
    example of the horrors of the trade and
    stimulated the development of the abolitionist
    movement in Britain, which dramatically expanded
    in size and influence in the late 1780s.

10
  • .
  • Yet the deliberate killings of Africans during
    voyages of slave ships
  • did not end following the Zong. Indeed they
    actually increased in
  • the early 19th century. When Royal Navy vessels
    chased
  • suspected illegal slave ships, the slavers' crews
    often threw Africans
  • overboard rather than be caught with slaves on
    board and have the
  • vessels impounded.
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