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Bristol and the Atlantic trade in the eighteenth centuryBristol and the Atlantic trade in the eighteenth century

Bristol and the Atlantic trade in the eighteenth century1993

Morgan, Kenneth

About this book

This book offers the first detailed examination for many years of the transatlantic trade and shipping of Bristol during the eighteenth century. It compares the performance of Bristol as a port during this period with the growth of other outports, especially Liverpool and Glasgow. Dr Morgan's analysis shows that the absolute growth of Bristol's Atlantic trade between 1700 and 1800 was concomitant with the relative decline of Bristol as a port. The main reasons for this decline were the lack of improvement to port facilities, increasing specialisation among the Bristol merchant community, the impact of war on trade, and more skilful business acumen in the tobacco and slave trades manifested by Glasgow and Liverpool merchants respectively. Bristol and the Atlantic Trade is based on a great variety of primary sources in the British Isles, the USA, the West Indies, Australia and continental Europe

Details

First published
1993
OL Work ID
OL1971030W

Subjects

CommerceHistoryColoniesBristol (England)Merchant marineShippingShipping, great britainShipping, historyMerchant marine, great britainMerchant marine, historyGreat britain, colonies, historyGreat britain, commerce

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.