This article looks at the development of Sierra Leone’s ship repair cluster, particularly focusing on the period 1780 to 1860. It argues that several factors contributed to the colony’s ability to develop a ship repair cluster. The first was the local environment, which provided both a safe harbor for ships and boats, and local materials that could be used on European and American ships. Secondly, the port’s increasing commercial role and its unique position as the site of the Courts of Mixed Commission for the adjudication of condemned slaving ships after the abolition of the slave trade gave ship’s carpenters access to a wide and varied range of both customers and supplies. Finally, these material effects were enhanced by the cluster’s effect on knowledge spillover and on-the-spot tacit knowledge creation as disruptions in the supply chain, competition with slave traders, and other local circumstances fostered innovation in Freetown’s repair cluster.
...MoreArticle Dániel Margócsy; Mary Augusta Brazelton (2023) Techniques of repair, the circulation of knowledge, and environmental transformation: Towards a new history of transportation. History of Science (pp. 3-18).
Article
Simon Werrett;
(2023)
Voyages of maintenance: Exploration, infrastructure, and modernity on the Krusenstern–Lisianskii circumnavigation between Russia and Japan from 1803 to 1806
Article
Pepijn Brandon;
Marten Dondorp;
(2023)
Nodes of knowledge, managing transfer: Shipbuilding and repair during the transformation from sail to steam
Article
Sara Caputo;
(2023)
Exploration and mortification: Fragile infrastructures, imperial narratives, and the self-sufficiency of British naval “discovery” vessels, 1760–1815
Article
Paul E Sampson;
(2023)
“The lungs of a ship”: Ventilation, acclimatization, and labor in the maritime environment, 1740–1800
Article
Milo Gough;
(2023)
Representing Freetown: Photographs, maps and postcards in the urban cartography of colonial Sierra Leone
Article
Colin Bos;
(2022)
John Augustus Abayomi Cole and the Search for an African Science, 1885–1898
Book
David Richardson;
(2022)
Principles and Agents: the British slave trade and its abolition
Book
Joshua D. Rothman;
(2021)
The ledger and the chain : How domestic slave traders shaped America
Article
Rob Johnstone;
(2020)
From Georgian traders to Victorian glass makers: The evolution of the Chance family business and its role in developing glass manufacturing
Article
Nicholas Radburn;
(Summer 2023)
The British Gunpowder Industry and the Transatlantic Slave Trade
Article
Justene Hill Edwards;
(Summer 2023)
“This Slavery Business Is a Horrible Thing”: The Economy of American Slavery in the Lives of the Enslaved
Book
Vanessa S. Oliveira;
(2021)
Slave trade and abolition : Gender, commerce, and economic transition in Luanda
Book
Sean Morey Smith;
Christopher Willoughby;
(2021)
Medicine and Healing in the Age of Slavery
Book
Manuel Barcia;
(2020)
The Yellow Demon of Fever: Fighting Disease in the Nineteenth-Century Transatlantic Slave Trade
Book
Johan Mathew;
(2016)
Margins of the Market: Trafficking and Capitalism across the Arabian Sea
Article
Peter M. Solar;
Klas Rönnbäck;
(2015)
Copper sheathing and the British slave trade
Book
John Harris;
(2020)
The last slave ships : New York and the end of the middle passage
Article
Eleanor Lucy Bird;
(2024)
Humphry Davy, transatlantic slavery and his constructions of racial difference in an early notebook
Article
Benjamin A. Skolnik;
Samantha J. Lee;
(2024)
Ideologies in Tension and Moments of Change: The Slave Jail at 1315 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia
Book
Alusine Jalloh;
(2018)
Muslim Fula Business Elites and Politics in Sierra Leone
Be the first to comment!