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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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The FoufcT h &E por / t is principally occupied ^ vith a de scriptidii of the Slave Trade as it exists at present , and wkh an ? icc 6 uii ; t of trie steps thedirectors have tafcen to prevent or check it . It is lamentable < > to find , that in the year eti&hg March iSj J ? 8 i f > 3 the iiefaVious traffic was carried on to a great' extent , ? the different coriwrHitiitatlohs received
fty ( the Dir ectdfs fihorh Africa ; concur instating , tha ^ t in the month 6 f Octobei * last , ; the cdast was crowded with ^ lavesliips . Thejpersobs itibst deeply ' erigaig * cd in the trade , appear tb haVe been citizens of the United States of America , vvho shelter thehiselves frbm die penal
consequences of their criminal conduct , ( the traffic haying been pronounced illegal b y the American as well as British Legislature ) by tneans of a nominal sale , both of ship and cargo , at some Spanish or Swedish port—the Havannah , for ekample , or the island of Bjarthblomew , But it has been discovered , that in
defiance of all the penalties imposed by Acts of iParliament , vessels , ' ujider foreign flags , have "been fitted oi » t in the ports of Liverpool and London , for the purposeof carrying slaves froin the coast of Africa tqf ine Spanish and Portuguese
Settlements in America , and that Several adventures of this description have actually been completed ^ One ship , the Cofnmercjo de Rio ^ was seized , at the instigation of the Directors , in the river , which appeared by its papers to be destined to take 700 or ^ °° slaves
from Africa to Cuba . The shi ^ and cargo have been condemned , with a loss to the owners of upwards of * ii , oo 6 / . This seizure has " discovered to the Directors facts , which tend to implicate ptrstns of tome consideration in Soctety , in the guilt of these and similar practices . ** It is stated by the Directors , that the
capture of Senegal , which was effected Juljr ^ i 8 cs > , by Cajrtain Columbine , of the navy , and Major Maxwell , the Commandant of Goree , has . considerably abridged the facilities enjoyed by the contraband slave traders , on that port of the slave coast - It has also furnished
an important inlet , both for commerce amd civilization ; the riVcr Senegal be ^ ing navigable for several hundred miles , anjd some of its branches approaching within a short distance of the Nigfer . It appearing , b y experiment , that the intilfaferry tree will' grow mud e ^ eii flou - * feh in •; Africa , a hnmbcrof dlk-w ^ rm S e ggs have been sent to Sierra Leone ,
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Gdree , aiitf Senegal , i ( whitheir th ? mul . berryplant fed been ' s ^ rit BeforeJwjthdictions respecting ; the rcfaring and tiling , mg of flienx ^ Mrther siipgiy ^ of jiaiM seeds has also beieri transi ^ tteo ^ c > ^^ a ^ andiikewisethe ^ 3 » 0 del of amUl Jojr c ^ ti * ing- rice from its hiis"E Seeds and plants have beetf'obiairicid from India for Ait
samedestiriatibri . ^; ' ' :: ; /¦ . '"V ^/ /; "' ' ICTie £ Wr ^ tbri Kaye drkwn " flip attenildn of flB ^ Sr c ^ rresporideiiu in Africa tp a : dfecbveryi said tx > Thive teen lately riiiHi in % he West tno ^ i , df Ws ptkMlability 6 T pr ^ C m ^ ixcciieiii , f bpfe frohi the fibres of the ^ ptknitane treeJ
Iii' the Third Mport tfttere wasaii account of a species of li&tjijt , ; toamifactured froto the leave ? 1 of j ^ ^ tfewfex kind of palm , whicb . abounds in Sierra i-eone and it ? neigfibourhobd ; : " thepirecitprs now add , thkt having procured a qtiantitiy of the article ; irpm ^ rica , they lately suDJected a small quantity of cord , maln ^ fe ^ ure ^ ifr ^^ to experiments calculated to ascertain it »
strength , as compared Wrtn q ^ e same length and weight of common hempea cord . The result lias ^ n vejfy ^ tisf ^ ctory . The African cord appeared stronger b ^ atbiit one ^ foaritb . V The So ^ ety nive yei-y jiidft : jousJ y obtained frWi Government ''" , $ modifica tion of the duties on imports front Africa , which were so keavy as to
discourage the trade , and in some iostaqecs to prohibit it . ^ . -. '/" ' No direct atteinpt has yet behii . xnadc 10 explore the continent ; of Africja r principally , sa ^ the Mrectors , because io proper means have offered themselves
to their tidtice . If : has , however , been communicated . to tfiem that i % f ia the ihtenWoh ot \ the 4 & * W 4 * fiQ $ tiHm to send , at in early opportypjijty ^ oye or more persons from this country , charged with the important object of farther discovery . ' In 6 i ^ irec ^ ors ^ 3 ^ ivc sigpified their rcadiriess to concur ia any eligible measure of this description , T'he following comrnunipation has been tifodc to * tfeie Society by JLieut . Col . Maxwell , the Commandant of ScncffaJ .
respecting the celebrated traveller , Mvtrd 6 Park , in a Jetter dated the Mtfrbf January fait , : — I " .. " ** : * ' ***? i WW ° f an opportuiiity , by way of Guernsey , to comn ^ uiucate to you the intelligence of $ he arrivaJ ^ fa this colohy , of the bl ^ dk man named Isaacs , who was the guide tfcisu conduct ed Mr , Mungo park to Saoiaiidiiie
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InitlligeitCc . —^ African Institution . B \ 7
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1810, page 517, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2409/page/45/
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