In the years following the Glorious Revolution, independent slave
traders challenged the charter of the Royal African Company by
asserting their natural rights as Britons to trade freely in
enslaved Africans. In this comprehensive history of the rise and
fall of the RAC, William A. Pettigrew grounds the transatlantic
slave trade in politics, not economic forces, analyzing the
ideological arguments of the RAC and its opponents in Parliament
and in public debate. Ultimately, Pettigrew powerfully reasons that
freedom became the rallying cry for those who wished to participate
in the slave trade and therefore bolstered the expansion of the
largest intercontinental forced migration in history.
Unlike previous histories of the RAC, Pettigrew's study pursues the
Company's story beyond the trade's complete deregulation in 1712 to
its demise in 1752. Opening the trade led to its escalation, which
provided a reliable supply of enslaved Africans to the mainland
American colonies, thus playing a critical part in entrenching
African slavery as the colonies' preferred solution to the American
problem of labor supply.