This work explores a neglected aspect of the forced migration of
African laborers to the Americas. Hundreds of thousands of captive
Africans continued their journeys after the Middle Passage across
the Atlantic. Colonial merchants purchased and then transshipped
many of these captives to other colonies for resale. Not only did
this trade increase death rates and the social and cultural
isolation of Africans; it also fed the expansion of British slavery
and trafficking of captives to foreign empires, contributing to
Britain's preeminence in the transatlantic slave trade by the
mid-eighteenth century. The pursuit of profits from exploiting
enslaved people as commodities facilitated exchanges across
borders, loosening mercantile restrictions and expanding capitalist
networks.
Drawing on a database of over seven thousand intercolonial slave
trading voyages compiled from port records, newspapers, and
merchant accounts, O'Malley identifies and quantifies the major
routes of this intercolonial slave trade. He argues that such
voyages were a crucial component in the development of slavery in
the Caribbean and North America and that trade in the unfree led to
experimentation with free trade between empires.