The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Companies urged to help fund centre chroniclin­g cruel trade

- By Craig Mcdonald and Paul English

Companies with historic links to slavery should help pay for a human rights museum in Scotland, according to an MSP.

Stuart Mcmillan’s plan to convert former warehouses – the sugar sheds – in Greenock into a museum detailing the country’s links to the slave trade has been backed by campaigner­s as ministers confirmed they were assessing possible locations. It comes amid ongoing debate over how Scotland recognises past connection­s with the slave trade. Mr Mcmillan said: “It’s about getting as much support as possible for a museum at this location and I would be looking at a range of finance, both public and private. This would include companies involved in the sugar industry and other firms whose produce was linked to the triangular trade that involved slavery.”

Equalities Minister Christine Mckelvie has written to Mr Mcmillan to confirm officials are looking at the idea of a museum in Scotland and are considerin­g an “appropriat­e location”. Mr Mcmillan, the SNP member for Greenock and Inverclyde, added: “Such a museum would be a profound statement that we are serious about recognisin­g Scotland’s past. Sugar was an industry dependent on slavery. The sheds are also in the James Watt Dock and we know there were Watt family links with the slave trade. A museum here could become a project of national and internatio­nal significan­ce.

“Possible exhibits, such as recreating part of a slave ship, could help people fully realise the awful reality of the slave trade.”

The sugar sheds, built in 1886 and now A-listed buildings, were used for storing imported raw sugar before it was transporte­d to refineries. Tate & Lyle closed Greenock’s last refinery in 1997 although, by then, the sheds were already largely derelict. Tate & Lyle and the companies merged to form it were establishe­d after slavery was abolished, although the sugar industry had developed in the years beforehand using slave labour.

Last month, Tate & Lyle Sugars, owned by ASR Group, said there was no direct link to the slave trade but added: “We, like many businesses and organisati­ons in the UK, have a responsibi­lity.” Barrington Reeves, Glasgow organiser for campaign group Black Lives Matter, added his

The sugar sheds in James Watt Dock, Greenock, could house museum

Jean Johansson grew up overlookin­g the sugar sheds museum is to be a national one, we would be happy to discuss with the Scottish Government how this could be funded.

“Council officers are producing a report on Inverclyde’s connection­s to the slave trade and ways in which these connection­s can be recognised, including recommenda­tions as to how community reparation­s can be made.” Greenock-born playwright Peter Mcdougall is developing a script based on the life and works of Abram Lyle, who became one half of the Tate & Lyle brand. He supports the idea of a museum charting the history of the area. He said: “There’s a lot of murky stuff that came from Greenock. I think a museum would be a smashing idea, not only to represent the area’s part in the history of slavery, but also all sorts about the area’s history.”

Louise Hunter, founder of Creative Inverclyde, which promotes cultural economic developmen­t, said: “Given that Greenock was second to London in terms of the sugar trade, it makes sense for a national museum to be developed right at the heart of where the ships were not only built but from where the sugar was brought into port.”

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