William Boats

William Boats (1716-1794) was a Liverpool slave trader.[1] Boats was responsible for 157 slave voyages, over half of his slaves were sent from the Bight of Biafra to Jamaica.[2]

He had shares in at least 156 Guineaman.[3] Liverpool Privateers wrote that Boats was a "waif" found in a boat and enrolled in a "Blue Coat School". It claims that he was apprenticed to "the sea" and rose to be a commander of a slave ship, becoming "one of the leading merchants and shipowners of Liverpool". Continuing, it says he married "Ms. Brideson" and captured a Spanish ship rich in gold and treasure. Liverpool Privateers talks of a Liverpool paper which announced his death at the age of 78, calling him a "most useful member of society".[4]

Boats was the first slaver to have his ships sheathed in copper to prevent infestations of wood-boring parasites.[5]

References

  1. Richardson, pp. 195.
  2. Richardson, pp. 29.
  3. Richardson, pp. 92.
  4. Williams, Gomer (1897). History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque. W. Heinemann. pp. 484–485. ISBN 9780722297797.
  5. Richardson, pp. 240.

Sources

  • Richardson, David (2007). Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery. UK: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-84631-066-9.


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