Mosquito Shore.
Papers relating to the Mosquito Shore: 1776.
London, Ordered, by The House of Commons, to be Printed, 27 February 1824.
Although Amerindian slavery had been outlawed by Jamaican law in 1741, the decree was all but ignored on the Mosquito Shore where even the superintendents of the protectorate engaged in the traffic. Worse still they encouraged the native Miskito to enslave tribesmen from the neighbouring Spanish colony of Guatemala, causing potential for diplomatic upset. In January 1776, a council of British subjects residing on the Mosquito coast was established by the temporary superintendent John Ferguson to rectify the situation, and in August that year an act was duly passed to the effect that 'all Indians who shall be offered for sale in any part of this Colony... shall be free to all intents and purposes, as any other aliens or foreigners are' (p.3).
Parliamentary report; folio (32 x 20 cm); 4ff. unbound as issued, light fold marks, minor dampstaining; 487-490pp.
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