
When Venture Smith's autobiography was published in 1798,
he had lived sixty years in southern New England--including twenty-eight
as a slave and another ten working to purchase the freedom of his
wife and children. But Venture had been born in Africa, where he
was called Broteer, and he had seen his home swept up in the innumerable
wars and raiding parties that scoured the land and supplied the trans-Atlantic
slave trade.
After his father was killed and his family scattered and made
captive, Broteer was delivered
to one of the many slaving ports that
in those days crowded the coast of
western Africa and brought aboard a
Rhode Island slaving ship. There he
caught the attention of the ship's
steward, who purchased the boy for
four gallons of rum and a piece of
calico and named him Venture, "on
account of his having purchased me
with his own private venture."
The slave ship was bound for Barbados with a cargo of two hundred
and sixty slaves. Venture recalls that of the two hundred slaves
who survived the brutal middle passage, all but four were sold in
Barbados. Venture accompanied his new master to New England, where
he was quickly put to work.
Despite his attempts to be a hardworking
and trustworthy servant, Venture
endured a regimen of brutality, including physical threats, beatings,
and whippings. As he grew older he fought back, participating in
an abortive runaway attempt, on several instances physically resisting,
and bravely claiming what rights he could to anyone who might listen.
With a wife and young children, Venture and his family led a precarious
existence, where at any time, he noted, a master might "convert me into cash
and speculate with me as with any other commodity."
Venture Smith's autobiography is one of only a few existing first-hand
accounts of the transatlantic
slave trade told from the perspective
of the captive. Yet in its particulars
it tells a remarkably common story
that helps us understand New England's
place within an international system
of slavery and commerce. next >>