The Trans-Atlanticist

The Trans-Atlanticist

Rum, Slavery, Piracy, and the Declaration of Independence

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In this episode, we discuss the rum industry in connection with grievances #16 and #17 in the Declaration of Independence:

"For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world"

"For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent"

Topics include the following:

-an explanation of rum production, from sugarcane to the finished product

-the origins of sugarcane and rum production in Barbados in the early 1600s

-the development of distilleries in the Colonies, particularly Massachusetts, in the late 1600s

-rum consumption in the Colonies by people in cities, slave traders, fishermen, and native Americans

-the use of rum as a form of payment in the triangular slave trade

-the imperial mercantilist competition between British rum and French brandy

-the moral and religious history of rum and alcohol consumption

-the Colonial activist movements that aimed to create political change, for example, by refusing to consume products made by enslaved people or by boycotting tea

-the Molasses Act of 1733 and the Sugar Act of 1763

-the rise of rum smuggling and the association between rum and piracy

-the deleted passage in the Declaration condemning slavery and its connection to the rum industry

-the state of the rum industry, slavery, and the abolition movement after the formation of the United States

-the development of the maple syrup industry as a moral alternative to the sugar and rum industry, which was driven by the immoral institution of slavery

Prof. Smith's book can be found here:

The Invention of Rum: Creating the Quintessential Atlantic Commodity

His article in Commonplace can be found here:

Where's the Pirate?

The cover image features a sugarcane plantation with a mill and enslaved people in Antigua.


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About this podcast

Andrew Sola explores the past, present, and future of relations between Europe and the United States with scholars, artists, authors, politicians, journalists, and business leaders. Based at the Amerikazentrum in Hamburg, the Trans-Atlanticist provides you with insights from the thought leaders who are shaping the trans-Atlantic relationship every single day.

by Andrew Sola

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