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Population Migration
- 18th Century
George John Scipio
Africanus c. 1763-1834
George was taken as an
infant from Sierra Leone in the 1760's. This was at a time when
slavery was still recognised in Britain, and Negro servants were
considered fashionable and a sign of wealth in society.

(George
Molineux (Y1/MOL/1))
He was given
to the Molineux family of Wolverhampton and christened at St Peter's
church on 31 March 1766, when he acquired his English name.

Extract
from Molineux family diary which reads '1770 I agreed to give John
Hunt 21 shillings to learn Scipio to dress hair
' (DX-121/24)
It is possible
that George was destined to be just another fashionable black servant
for the Molineux family, but in 1772 a legal judgement made it unlawful
to own slaves on English soil.
This judgement
caused many African slaves in England to become destitute and homeless
as their owners could no longer keep them. Many returned to their
native Africa.
However George was apprenticed
to a brassfounder
and served out his time in Wolverhampton.
Following the completion
of his apprenticeship
George was free to travel and work where he wished, and he moved
to Nottingham. The reason for this is not clear but the Molineux
family did have connections in the county.
George became a successful
businessman. He is known to have worked as a labourer, waiter
and brassfounder,
but the employment that brought him the most financial success was
the Africanus Register of Servants, a servant agency.
His wife Esther opened
a milliners
business on the same premises. George bought adjacent land and gained
the rent from three houses built on it.
George now met all the
qualifications to be a Freeman and was eligible to vote in elections
in Nottingham (he is listed in the Nottingham poll
book for 1818, for example).
George
John Scipio Africanus died in 1834 aged 71 years, and is buried
in St Mary's Church, Nottingham.
Obviously there would
have been other wealthy families and individuals in Wolverhampton
who owned slaves, and after slavery was abolished in Britain in
1807 black men and women in the town would have lived as free men.
There are few, if any local records of their activities. One source
that we have is the church register. However these must be used
with caution. Not everyone was a Christian, and even if they were
they may not have worshipped in the Church of England.
A
search of the Wolverhampton St Peter's baptism register from 1539
to 1812 reveales two further references to Black men:
| 8
July 1771 |
Richard
Crosby Africanus |
an
adult negroe |
baptism |
| 25
Jan 1785 |
John
Towels |
a
negro man |
baptism |
Other families involved
in slave owning were the Giffards of Chillington and the Unetts,
originally from Wolverhampton, who inherited the estates of the
Wilkes family of Willenhall.
The extract from the
Molineux family diary below refers to Pluto, who is believed to
have been a black servant, though some researchers think Pluto and
George Africanus were one and the same person.

Click
on the image to enlarge
Molineux
diary 1762 (DX-121/24)
Apart from landowning,
Wolverhampton people had other interests in the slave trade. In
1767 Henry Waldram was listed in a trade directory as a 'lock maker,
horse screw, men's leg & Negro collar, thumb's screw, and hand
cuff manufacturer. In 1770 he was described as a 'Negro collar and
handcuff manufacturer'.

Trade
directory 1770

Captain
Wilkes Unett (above) and John Wilkes Unett, Richard's brother (below)
( (Y1-UNE)

Not everyone in Wolverhampton
supported the slave trade. In 1826 John Mander chaired a meeting
to formulate a petition to parliament against slavery. The Wolverhampton
Chronicle recorded that 'the meeting was thinly attended':

Click
on the image to enlarge
Wolverhampton
Chronicle, 17th and 25th January, 1826
In the 19th century an
interesting legal case developed in the town. Henry Box Brown, an
escaped American slave (slavery was still legal in America) successfully
sued the Wolverhampton Herald in 1852. Brown was touring
England with a show depicting the evils of slavery and alleged that
the Herald's review of the show as a 'gross and palpable exaggeration'
had kept the Wolverhampton public away and lost him money. Taking
into account the personal insults contained in the article, the
judge awarded him £100 damages, a considerable sum in those
days.

Advertisment
for Henry Box Brown's performance,
Wolverhampton Chronicle, March 1852
Ira Aldridge, 'The African
Roscius', was one of the few serious black actors to gain acceptance
and popularity in the 19th century. Born early in the century in
either Africa or America (the extact details are unknown) he spent
most of his career touring England and Europe. He appeared in Wolverhampton
in 1846 at the old theatre in High Green recreating some of his
most famous roles, particularly as Shakespeare's Othello. He was
known mainly for black roles, but did appear as King Lear on one
tour to Russia.


Advertisements
for Aldridge's performances, Wolverhampton Chronicle, October
1846

Click
on the image to enlarge
Review
of Aldridge's performances,
Wolverhampton Chronicle,
October 1846

Click
on the image to enlarge
Theatre
poster for the performance (DX-343)
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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