Calendar An icon of a desk calendar. Cancel An icon of a circle with a diagonal line across. Caret An icon of a block arrow pointing to the right. Email An icon of a paper envelope. Facebook An icon of the Facebook "f" mark. Google An icon of the Google "G" mark. Linked In An icon of the Linked In "in" mark. Logout An icon representing logout. Profile An icon that resembles human head and shoulders. Telephone An icon of a traditional telephone receiver. Tick An icon of a tick mark. Is Public An icon of a human eye and eyelashes. Is Not Public An icon of a human eye and eyelashes with a diagonal line through it. Pause Icon A two-lined pause icon for stopping interactions. Quote Mark A opening quote mark. Quote Mark A closing quote mark. Arrow An icon of an arrow. Folder An icon of a paper folder. Breaking An icon of an exclamation mark on a circular background. Camera An icon of a digital camera. Caret An icon of a caret arrow. Clock An icon of a clock face. Close An icon of the an X shape. Close Icon An icon used to represent where to interact to collapse or dismiss a component Comment An icon of a speech bubble. Comments An icon of a speech bubble, denoting user comments. Comments An icon of a speech bubble, denoting user comments. Ellipsis An icon of 3 horizontal dots. Envelope An icon of a paper envelope. Facebook An icon of a facebook f logo. Camera An icon of a digital camera. Home An icon of a house. Instagram An icon of the Instagram logo. LinkedIn An icon of the LinkedIn logo. Magnifying Glass An icon of a magnifying glass. Search Icon A magnifying glass icon that is used to represent the function of searching. Menu An icon of 3 horizontal lines. Hamburger Menu Icon An icon used to represent a collapsed menu. Next An icon of an arrow pointing to the right. Notice An explanation mark centred inside a circle. Previous An icon of an arrow pointing to the left. Rating An icon of a star. Tag An icon of a tag. Twitter An icon of the Twitter logo. Video Camera An icon of a video camera shape. Speech Bubble Icon A icon displaying a speech bubble WhatsApp An icon of the WhatsApp logo. Information An icon of an information logo. Plus A mathematical 'plus' symbol. Duration An icon indicating Time. Success Tick An icon of a green tick. Success Tick Timeout An icon of a greyed out success tick. Loading Spinner An icon of a loading spinner. Facebook Messenger An icon of the facebook messenger app logo. Facebook An icon of a facebook f logo. Facebook Messenger An icon of the Twitter app logo. LinkedIn An icon of the LinkedIn logo. WhatsApp Messenger An icon of the Whatsapp messenger app logo. Email An icon of an mail envelope. Copy link A decentered black square over a white square.

Dundee’s shame: Historian reveals city linen was used to clothe American and Caribbean slaves

An old photo of Dundee city centre.
An old photo of Dundee city centre.

A Dundee historian has spoken of “uncomfortable reading” while researching the city’s one-time linen industry for a history of Dundee.

Norman Watson said countless ships sailed directly from Dundee to the southern states of America and the Caribbean with huge cargoes of cheap linen clothing for slaves.

Norman Watson who delivered a talk to the Dundee and District Philatelic Society.

It comes after a statue of George Kinloch in Albert Square came under scrutiny from anti-racism protesters due to to the reformer’s family ties to the slave trade.

“By the 1820s Dundee had 30 mills spinning Baltic flax into linen and had overtaken Hull as Britain’s leading flax port,” Norman said.

“It was by no means the Juteopolis to come, but linen still employed 3,000 people in a population of 45,000, including 600 under 14 years of age and some as young as six or seven.

“The town produced coarse linen. In the early 1800s it exported sailcloth, bagging and cheaper shirting to frontier settlements in Canada and North America but, as markets changed, the trade moved south and to vastly increased cargoes to the slave plantations of the New World.

“Trading began with the ports of New York and Charleston, in South Carolina, and extended to the West Indies and South America.

“Vast quantities of Dundee’s linen was used to clothe slaves as manufacturers accessed the growing empire being carved out in the Americas.

“Ships began sailing directly to the slave capitals of Savannah, New Orleans, Mobile and Charleston, the major point of entry for Africans brought to America, with cargoes of cheap, coarse cloth to be stitched together in situ for the loose-fitting outer garments slaves used on plantations.

“Female slaves had dresses made from osnaburg, commonly called ‘Negro cloth’, which was the heavy coarse cotton made in Dundee and some other linen centres – and used in this country for sacking.

“Records of runaway slaves provide some of the most telling evidence of the imported linen products they wore.

Statues in Dundee and Perthshire earmarked in ‘topple’ campaign by anti-racism activists

“So, in the Virginia Gazette in the year 1775, for example, Adam, aged 23, ran away from Brandon Parish, Prince George County, while wearing ‘osnaburg shirt, Negro cotton jacket, old blue cloth breeches and cotton gambadoes’. When Stephen, aged about 21, escaped on New Year’s Day 1775, he wore an osnaburg shirt, and carried off two more osnaburg shirts.

“Worse, although Dundee Town Council had sanctioned the abolition of slavery in the 1780s, manufacturers had little enthusiasm for abolition and continued to exploit colonial slave markets until it was outlawed throughout the British Empire in 1833.

“Both the Dundee and Forfar Chambers of Commerce refused to support abolition, with the latter petitioning in 1823 that it supplied the West Indian planters ‘Osnaburghs for the whole of their negroes’ clothing’.

It can be concluded, added Dr Watson, the fortunes of Dundee’s linen lords, if not its jute barons, were partly constructed on profits from the slave trade.

“The niche for cheap slave clothing was central to Dundee’s economy. Emancipation would have threatened its manufacturing base. Faced by protest meetings, the publication of anti-slavery local pamphlets and the increase in the use of cotton in America’s southern states, Dundee turned to the sugar plantations of the Caribbean, exporting nearly four million yards to Jamaica, Haiti and San Domingo in the later 1820s.”

In 1829 alone, he said, 1,714,416 yards were shipped to Jamaica, 1,407,624 yards to Haiti and 326,010 yards to Brazil as the town continued to attract what a Dundee pamphlet of 1792 called, ‘the wealth derived from the horrible traffic’ which ‘spreads inconceivable anguish’.

“Custom House returns in 1832 show total linen exports from Dundee worth £600,000 – around £55 million today – mostly products from Baxter Brothers, the town’s pre-eminent linen manufacturer.

“Dundee was never a slave trading port like Bristol or Liverpool – and yet, for a time, it developed a virtual monopoly in the supply of cheap, low-grade slave clothing.”