Newspaper clippings about Old Calabar

About the Project

This is a newspaper clipping about Old Calabar from ca. 1842–1845. Between 1720 and 1830 over one million enslaved men and women were forced onto British slave ships based in Old Calabar. Although the British had banned the slave trade in 1808, slavery was not banned in all British territories until 1833, and traders from other nations continued to purchase slaves at Calabar until 1842. Two of the most prominent Efik kings at Calabar, Eyo Honesty II and Eyamaba V, gave-up their trading monopoly over the supply of slaves captured in the interior, and replaced it with a plantation system for the cultivation of palm oil. By the 1840s, Calabar had become the center for the export of palm oil to industrial Britain. This article is written by Hugh Goldie, a missionary from the Presbyterian Church of Nigeria. Help us transcribe this newspaper article that describes events occurring in Calabar during a great time of change.

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