Photo of Birmingham Canal. (Local Studies, WPS: WK/B11/ 6854)
Manufacturer's Trade Card. (Local Studies. Trade Card 633).
Manufacturer's Trade Card. (Local Studies. Trade Card 251).
Birmingham, Industry and Slavery
Built in the late eighteenth century, the Gas Street Basin is the meeting place of the Birmingham Main Line and the Worcester and Birmingham canals. These canals allowed the town to import and export a huge variety of metals and goods.
At this period, the transatlantic slave trade had reached its peak. Selling guns, chains and other products (often transported by canal) as was just one way in which Birmingham's economy heavily relied on slavery.
In response to the continuing transatlantic slave trade, Joseph Sturge helped to form 'The Birmingham Antislavery Society' in 1826.
This campaign group worked alongside 'The Birmingham Ladies Society For The Relief of Negro Slaves' and a number of black abolitionists who visited Birmingham, such as Frederick Douglass (who gave a speech here in 1846).
Whilst some critics argued slavery abroad was needed to support jobs at home, these activists argued slavery was morally indefensible. Sturge refused all products connected with slave labour.