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  2. Natchez slave market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natchez_slave_market

    The Forks of the Road slave market dates to the 18th century; slave sales in vicinity of Natchez, Mississippi were primarily at the riverboat landings in the 1780s but the widespread use of the Natchez Trace from Nashville beginning in the 1790s shifted the market inland to the Forks of the Road "located on the Trace at the northeast edge of the upper town."

  3. Trade winds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_winds

    The term originally derives from the early fourteenth century sense of trade (in late Middle English) still often meaning "path" or "track". [2] The Portuguese recognized the importance of the trade winds (then the volta do mar, meaning in Portuguese "turn of the sea" but also "return from the sea") in navigation in both the north and south Atlantic Ocean as early as the 15th century. [3]

  4. Andrew Jackson and the slave trade in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson_and_the...

    Slaves from overseas were often re-exported through the West Indies, particularly British colonial Jamaica, [15] whose planters preferred to buy Igbo people abducted from "the Gold Coast and the Bight of Benin." [16] The Mississippi Territory of the United States was organized in 1798. [7]

  5. TradeWinds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TradeWinds_(newspaper)

    TradeWinds is the world's biggest shipping news service, publishing both online news and a printed weekly newspaper, that covers shipping as a global industry. [1] TradeWinds is owned by the DN Media Group and is headquartered in Oslo. [2] They also have an office in London at Wood Street. [1]

  6. New Orleans slave market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Orleans_slave_market

    New Orleans, Louisiana was a major, if not the major, slave market of the lower Mississippi River valley of the United States from approximately 1830 until the American Civil War. Slaves from the upper south were trafficked by land and by sea to New Orleans where they were sold at a markup to the cotton and sugar plantation barons of the region.

  7. Mississippi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi

    Through the trade, an estimated nearly one million slaves were forcibly transported to the Deep South, including Mississippi, in an internal migration that broke up many slave families of the Upper South, where planters were selling excess slaves. The Southerners imposed slave laws in the Deep South and restricted the rights of free blacks.

  8. Isaac Franklin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Franklin

    Isaac Franklin (May 26, 1789 – April 27, 1846) was an American slave trader and plantation owner. Born to wealthy planters in what would become Sumner County, Tennessee, he assisted his brothers in trading slaves and agricultural surplus along the Mississippi River in his youth, before briefly serving in the Tennessee militia during the War of 1812.

  9. Mississippian shatter zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippian_shatter_zone

    Scholar Robbie Ethridge said that the Mississippian shatter zone was characterized by the growth in commercial trade in animal skins and slaves between Indians and Europeans, the encroachments of Europeans, the loss of Indian lives caused by epidemics of European diseases, and increased violence and warfare caused in part by the demand of the Europeans for Indian slaves and the demand of ...

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