Seven Stars Pub

In 1787 the publican of The Seven Stars helped Thomas Clarkson find out about the Transatlantic Slave Trade. Clarkson interviewed sailors and other crew members to find out about conditions on board the slave ships of Bristol. This was a very dangerous investigation since most ship owners and investors in them felt that it was none of Clarkson's business, and wanted to prevent his inquiries. Many crew members were frightened to talk to him because they thought they might not get any further work if they told how bad conditions were on the ships.
Clarkson was threatened lots of times, and beaten up several times during his investigation. He found that conditions on the ships were appalling. The enslaved Africans suffered the most, and were treated in a very brutal manner in order to try and break their spirit and crush any potential resistance. Even the crew faced horrible conditions. There was a lot of cruelty and bullying amongst the sailors and officers on the ships, especially towards any black sailors, and there was a tremendously high death rate, with it being perfectly normal for up to a quarter of any crew and its prisoners to die from illness and disease during the voyage.
Content generated during research for the paperback book 'Bristol: Ethnic Monorities and the City 1000-2001' (ISBN 13 : 978-1-86077-477-5 ) for the England's Past for Everyone series