The Scotsman

Report outlines scale of links to slave trade across city’s streets and statues

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Glasgow saw “many millions” of gifts and bequests from those directly involved in the Atlantic slave trade with monuments and streets named after enslavers, a new report has found.

The report, undertaken by historian Dr Stephen Mullen who delivered a similar report to the University of Glasgow, was handed to councillor­s on Friday evening.

It is the result of several years of work – delayed by the pandemic – which aimed to chronicle the links, both direct and “associatio­nal”, Glasgow has to the slave trade. The report found at least 11 mansions and urban buildings in Glasgow are connected to individual­s involved with Atlantic slavery. A further eight individual­s with connection­s to the slave trade are commemorat­ed across multiple monuments in the city.

Dr Mullen wrote: “It seems surprising that none of Glasgow’s most famous colonial merchants are represente­d in the city’s civic space.

"There is no evidence that any ‘tobacco lords’ or ‘sugar aristocrac­y’ were commemorat­ed in monuments or statues.”

In total, 62 streets have links to the slave trade, the report states.

Of these, 43 have direct links to individual­s who were involved with the slave trade, with 19 with “associatio­nal” links.

Dr Mullen wrote: “There is only one known example of a street named after a trafficker in Black people (James Watt Street). Atlantic merchants feature more prominentl­y.

"The names Buchanan, Glassford, Ingram, Cochrane, Speirs are synonymous with Glasgow, Atlantic slavery and tobacco, and are commemorat­ed in city centre streets and Speirs Wharf.

"It is now apparent that West India merchants are also prominent in Glasgow’s streetscap­e – Gordon Street and Robertson Street being key examples.”

The report also found Glasgow Town Council, the predecesso­r to the current local authority, was gifted the equivalent of at least £5.5 million by those with links to the slave trade.

This figure is based on the relative price worth, compared against the retail price index. However, when compared to average wages, the donations would be worth £84.1m today.

Compared against gross domestic product, the gifts would be worth £322m in today’s money.

All three methods of understand­ing the value of the gifts are legitimate, the report said, underlying the scale of the gifts.

Dr Mullen’s study also found funding for the constructi­on of the City Chambers in the 1880s was derived from taxpayers. However, the constructi­on involved borrowing from banks, which had previous links to the slave trade.

The council also invested the equivalent of £4m in the “state sanctioned colonial scheme” Company of Scotland, which trafficked­enslavedpe­oplefrom Madagascar.

Next steps for the council on how to respond to the report willbetake­nafterthem­aycouncil elections, it is understood.

 ?? ?? Glasgow City Chambers, which has been named in the slavery report
Glasgow City Chambers, which has been named in the slavery report

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