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Liverpool Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1820-1900 - Part 3

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Liverpool Customs Bills of Entry, 1828–1900

During the eighteenth century, the wealthy city corporation poured millions of pounds into constructing wet docks that became the envy of other British ports. Liverpool rose to prominence demographically and commercially in this period.
Professor Kenneth Morgan, Brunel University

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Explore Liverpool’s maritime success as a major British port

Containing over 70,000 images, Liverpool Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1828–1900 documents 80 years of imports and exports to and from the city of Liverpool. This collection contains bills of entry derived from the reports and manifests of ships that docked in Liverpool. These documents offer unique insights into Liverpool's maritime history and the goods traded in Liverpool between 1828 and 1900. This collection, therefore, provides students and researchers with an overview of global trade networks and their interaction with the city of Liverpool.

The prosperity of the city during this period was built on its maritime success as one of England’s major docks. In the early eighteenth century, Liverpool merchants supplemented their existing trade links with Ireland and Europe with voyages around the Atlantic. Liverpool became heavily involved in various imperial trade networks, including tobacco, sugar, indigo, rice, rum, and cotton. Many of the goods traded in Liverpool were derived from the labour of enslaved people. Indeed, Liverpool and its merchants were major players in the transatlantic slave trade. By 1800, Liverpool was the largest slave trading port in the world and much of the city’s wealth and development relied on enslavement and the triangular trade. 

In 1807, The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act was passed and prohibited the trade of enslaved people throughout the British empire. This drastically changed shipping in Liverpool, which had previously been heavily involved in trading enslaved people. Merchants did, however, continue to trade goods produced by enslaved people and slavery continued its legacy in Liverpool’s trade networks.

Contents

Liverpool Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1820-1900 - Part 3...

Liverpool Customs Bills of Entry, 1828–1900

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Highlights

Licensed to access Bills of Entry for the year 1828

Part of the Sandbach, Tinne, & Co. dynasty, the Sandbach family were heavily involved in trading commodities cultivated by enslaved people in the Caribbean and South America. The family owned at least two cotton plantations in Demerara. They were awarded large amounts of financial compensation following the Abolition of Slavery in 1833. This document (image 351) lists sugar, rum, cotton, and coffee imported by the company.

Licensed to access Bills of Entry for the year 1858

Established in 1600, the East India Company sourced cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, turmeric, and pepper from across the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. Lucrative and undoubtedly exploitative, the spice trade formed a significant component of Britain’s economic development. This document (image 41) lists 25 bags of spices imported into Liverpool from East India.

Licensed to access Bills of Entry for the year 1885

Founded in Liverpool in 1860 by Thomas Ogden, Ogden's Tobacco Company became one of the largest tobacco manufacturers in the country. By 1860, Ogden owned and operated six tobacco factories in the city. This document (image 1070) lists 50 barrels of tobacco imported by T Ogden from Rotterdam.

Licensed to access Bills of Entry for the year 1895

Lamport and Holt made their fortune by shipping coffee between Brazil and North America, developing a virtual monopoly. The coffee they traded was largely cultivated by enslaved people, and this exploitation continued after slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888 through indentured labour schemes. This document (image 208) lists 128 bags of coffee imported by the company into Liverpool.

Insights

  • Bills of entry are printed records of imports and exports. The first bills of entry for Liverpool were printed around 1750 and over time they became more extensive, eventually serving as business newspapers for the local commercial community. By the late 1840s, the bills were printed daily, except for Sundays, giving a comprehensive overview of maritime trade in Liverpool. The documents, included in this collection, 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 Liverpool’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 entering and leaving Liverpool. Pimento and logwood were shipped to Britain from Jamaica, while mustard seeds, liquorice root, and saffron came from India. Bacon and lard made their way from New Orleans, and wine, lemons, and oranges were imported from Spain. Meanwhile, Britain exported tobacco, paint, and sewing machines to Africa; cotton, soap, and tools to Singapore; whilst wine, leather, and glassware were shipped to Brazil.

  • Liverpool was a major slave trading port in the eighteenth century. This changed after the abolition of the slave trade in 1807, and later, the end of plantation slavery in most British colonies after 1833. Cotton then became the most important commodity in Liverpool. In 1784, the first cotton from North America arrived in Liverpool. By 1850, over 1.5 million bales of cotton were imported from America to Liverpool every year and cotton accounted for almost half of the city’s trade. The cotton boom relied on cotton produced from the labour of enslaved people, as slavery was not abolished in North America until 1865. Mills across Lancashire transformed this cotton into finished goods and garments, which were then exported across the globe from Liverpool’s docks.

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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