Felix Doran (slave trader): Difference between revisions
Considering people in NI are either anglo-Irish, Irish or Ulster-scots, how do you know with certainty that he was actually Irish? There's plenty of ulster scots with Irish surnames, and plenty of anglo-Irish with Irish surnames. Edmund burke was a catholic but is labled as anglo-irish on wikipedia. There's No clear definitive evidence that he is Irish. Tag: Reverted |
No edit summary Tag: Reverted |
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{{short description|Irish slave trader}} |
{{short description|Irish slave trader}} |
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[[File:Slave trade. Édouard Duncan.jpg|thumb|Drawing of slave traders collecting enslaved people off the coast of Africa]] |
[[File:Slave trade. Édouard Duncan.jpg|thumb|Drawing of slave traders collecting enslaved people off the coast of Africa]] |
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'''Felix Doran''' (1708–1776) was |
'''Felix Doran''' (1708–1776) was either Irish, Anglo-Irish or Ulster scots [[middle passage|slave trader]]. He was responsible for at least 69 slave voyages. Doran moved to [[Liverpool]] in the 1740s and operated out of the [[Port of Liverpool]]. His first slave-ship was called ''Lively'' and his final one was called ''Essex''. |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
Revision as of 18:11, 9 May 2024
Felix Doran (1708–1776) was either Irish, Anglo-Irish or Ulster scots slave trader. He was responsible for at least 69 slave voyages. Doran moved to Liverpool in the 1740s and operated out of the Port of Liverpool. His first slave-ship was called Lively and his final one was called Essex.
Early life
Doran was born in Ireland, baptised and brought up as a Catholic. He may have been born in County Down, where the surname Doran was common.[1]
Slave trade
Doran moved to Liverpool in the late 1740s, from the Port of Liverpool he completed at least 69 slave voyages.[2][1] His first recorded slave voyage was with the slave ship Lively in 1737. The captain, Brooke Richmond, bought captive people from Africa and sold them in the West Indies. Thereafter Patrick Dwyer was the captain of Lively for 5 more slave voyages. On these voyages Doran took enslaved people from Africa and sold them in Barbados.[3] Doran also owned the slave ships Hazard, Pearl, Vestal, Forde, Kildare and Molly, amongst others.[3]
Doran was a partner in the firm of Knight, Doran & Co. with the slave trader John Knight. Together they leased the New Glasshouse on Liverpool's South Dock from the Corporation of Liverpool.[1]
Two ships, one called Judith and the other Lively, are recorded as having plantation certificates in the name Felix Doran.[1]
Doran's final slave voyage was with the ship Essex in 1776. The ship was constructed in Liverpool in 1770 and was carrying four cannons. The ship was captained by Ralph Abraham and picked up captives at Bassa and they were sold in Antigua. Of the 359 enslaved people that started the journey across the Atlantic Ocean, 31 died on board. Doran himself died in 1776, before Essex disembarked its captives.[3]
Personal life
Doran was baptised and brought up as a Catholic, but later married a non-Catholic, Mary Foxcroft. She was the niece of one of Doran's slave trading partners, Thomas Foxcroft.[1]
His son, also called Felix Doran (1758–1827), was a slave trader. Felix Doran Jr was responsible for 21 slave voyages, also from the Port of Liverpool.[2]
Death
In his will Doran left £200 to his sister in Dublin, and a further £500 to her should his son Felix Jr die before the age of 21. He was buried at St Nicholas's Church, Liverpool.[1]
Legacy
From 1780 Liverpool was the single biggest slave port in the Atlantic world.[4] Numerous streets and localities in Liverpool are named after slave traders.[5] Felix Doran has Dorans Lane named after him, although he lived on nearby Lord Street.[6] Piers Dudgeon writes that Doran "seems to cling ghost-like to the area".[6]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Pope, David J. (October 2004). "Liverpool's Catholic Mercantile and Maritime Business Community in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century Part 1". British Catholic History. 27 (2): 244–279. doi:10.1017/S0034193200031332. ISSN 0034-1932. S2CID 162874525.
- ^ a b Richardson 2007, p. 197.
- ^ a b c "Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade – Database". www.slavevoyages.org.
- ^ "Liverpool: European Capital of... the Transatlantic Slave Trade". National Museums Liverpool.
- ^ "Liverpool identifies first streets for slavery plaques". BBC News. 24 August 2020.
- ^ a b Dudgeon, Piers (25 October 2012). Our Liverpool: Memories of Life in Disappearing Britain. Headline. ISBN 9780755364442 – via Google Books.
Sources
- Richardson, David (2007). Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery. UK: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-84631-066-9.