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Bristol Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1770-1917

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Bristol Presentments, 1770–1917

Shipping was the lifeblood of the Atlantic economy… shipping patterns were the arteries through which the merchants and commodities of the North Atlantic trading world were drawn together into an international commercial network.
Kenneth Morgan, “Shipping Patterns and the Atlantic Trade of Bristol, 1749–1770”, The William and Mary Quarterly 46, no. 3 (1989): 506.

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Explore Bristol’s maritime success as a major British port

Containing over 28,000 images, Bristol Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1770–1917 documents nearly 150 years of imports and exports to and from the port city of Bristol. The prosperity of the city during this period was built on its maritime success as one of England’s major ports. Bristol was heavily involved in various imperial trade networks, including tobacco, sugar, indigo, rice, rum, and cotton. Many of the goods traded in Bristol were derived from the labour of enslaved people. Indeed, Bristol and its merchants were major players in the transatlantic slave trade, and much of the city’s wealth and development relied on enslavement and the triangular trade.

This collection contains Bristol Presentments, bills of entry derived from the reports and manifests of ships that docked in Bristol. These documents offer unique insights into British maritime history and the goods traded in Bristol from 1770 to 1917. This collection, therefore, provides students and researchers with an overview of global trade networks and their interaction with the city of Bristol, including the city’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. This collection also details how Bristol’s shipping was affected by The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act, passed in 1807, which prohibited the trade of enslaved people throughout the British empire.

Contents

Bristol Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1770-1917...

Bristol Presentments, 1770–1917

Volumes & Documents 

Highlights

Licensed to access 8 September 1802

This document (image 160) details the contents of the Alert, a slave ship leaving Bristol, destined for Africa. The slave ship captain, David Drynan, completed several trips in the transatlantic slave trade. Onboard were goods which would have been sold on the West African coast in exchange for enslaved people, including “6 trunks cotton manufac.”, “550 kegs gunpowder”, “50 boxes tobacco pipes”, and “10 butts Eaft-India goods and ftained or dyed cottons”.

Licensed to access 6 September 1814

This document (image 142) lists three casks of manufactured brass exported by Harford & Co., known as the Bristol Brass & Copper Company. Described by their main competitor as “perhaps the most considerable brass house in all Europe”, the company reached its peak in the late eighteenth century. Alongside domestic buyers, traders in West Africa highly valued brass and copper goods, making them important to transatlantic slavery. The company was hit hard by The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act (1807), which decimated their largest market.

Licensed to access 30 July 1821

Lucrative and undoubtedly exploitative, the spice trade formed a significant component of Britain’s economic development, spearheaded by the East India Company. These commodities were exported to Britain and became essential for cooking, medicine, and preserving. This document (image 120) details “Sales Declared by the East India Company”, which includes 130,000 lbs of cinnamon, 100,000 lbs of nutmeg, 20,000 lbs of mace, 2,855 bags of black pepper, and 2,104 bags of ginger.

Licensed to access 5 January 1899

W.D. & H.O. Wills, founded in 1786 and based in Bristol, was the first British company to mass-produce cigarettes. The Wills family were known for their philanthropy. They gifted significant money, land, and property to the University of Bristol, becoming one of the biggest financial supporters of the university in its history. Although the family were not directly involved in the transatlantic slave trade, earlier generations traded tobacco which was cultivated by enslaved people. This document (image 2) lists 100 cases of leaf tobacco imported by the company.

Insights

  • Presentments are printed records of imports and exports. They were published twice weekly, giving a comprehensive overview of maritime trade in Bristol. The documents contain detailed information such as the names of ships; where they arrived from; where they embarked for; their captains; their tonnage; their date of arrival and departure; cargo details; and the names of the people and companies associated with each shipment on board.

  • The sources in this collection provide a detailed overview of the nature and development of Britain’s trade routes and relationships. They also highlight how trading priorities changed over time, particularly during the industrial revolution when Britain began exporting large volumes of goods manufactured using new technologies and processes. Crucially, the documents also illustrate how Britain’s commercial interests and networks laid the foundations for a vast, global empire.

  • The documents in this collection detail key imports and exports, many associated with the transatlantic slave trade. For example sugar and elephant teeth were shipped to Britain from Jamaica; cotton and ginger from Barbados; bacon, lard, and canned meats from New York; and wine, almonds, and vegetable oil from France. Meanwhile, Britain exported tobacco, brandy, and sherry to Africa; coal, books, and paint to Canada; whilst leather and machinery made their way to South America.

  • In the eighteenth century, Bristol became well known for its strong industry and entrepreneurial character. Bristol already had blossoming soap, glassware, and pottery industries, as well as a reputation for first-rate shipbuilding. Bristol was also known for its quality metal production, notably iron, lead, brass, copper, and zinc. A rise in transatlantic shipping only contributed to Bristol’s economic success. New factories sprung up in the city, designed to process imported colonial produce, which was invariably linked to plantation slavery. As a result, industries such as tobacco processing, sugar refining, distilling, and chocolate-making flourished in the city.

Licensed to access The Church of England and Social Change in Manchester, 1635-1928

1635   1928

Licensed to access The Industrial Revolution: Technological Innovation in the Textile Industry, 1672-1929

1672   1929

Licensed to access Essays and Dissertations of the Scottish Royal Medical Society, 1751-1801

1751   1970

Licensed to access British Poor Schools in the Nineteenth Century, 1812-1901

1812   1901
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