When the monopoly of the London-based Royal Africa Company came to an end in 1698, Bristol found itself well placed to enter the "Africa Trade" and by 1730 had replaced London as the centre of operations for the slave trade.
Bristol's location on the Atlantic side of Britain also aided its participation in the slave trade.
For outwardly respectable merchants "out of sight was out of mind"; their lust for money overcame any doubts they may have had about the moral legitimacy of the trade. Amongst the leading Bristol merchants of the time who benefited substantially from the slave trade were John Pinney and Edward Colston.
|
|||||||||||||