University of Glasgow: Runaways London Project Officially Unveiled
A new project called Runaways London will bring poets and artists together to try to tell and reimage some of the stories of London’s runaway slaves.
Runaway London is led by literature charity Spread the Word in partnership with the University of Glasgow and Ink Sweat & Tears Press.
The new poetry and artworks will reimage the stories of these freedom-seekers in 17th and 18th Century London.
The Runaways London anthology, film and resources for young people launches at Museum of London Docklands Thursday 21 October
Dr Peggy Brunache, Lecturer in the History of Atlantic Slavery & Director of the Beniba Centre for Slavery Studies, University of Glasgow, said: “The history of Britain and slavery isn’t just about the accumulation of wealth via the brutal enslavement of Africans and racialised terror that occurred thousands of miles away in the Caribbean. It’s also about how the enslaved were forced to live and work here on British soil and courageously resisted their captivity at every turn possible, seeking freedom. That Black history is British history. It belongs to all of us.”
While many people view the trade in enslaved people as something which took place along the so-called ‘Middle Passage’ between Africa and the Americas, between the 1650s and 1780s many hundreds of enslaved people were brought to London and the UK. Most were African although a significant minority were South Asian. What’s even less well-known is that while in the capital some attempted to and were successful in escaping.
One of the ways we are aware of the existence of these enslaved Londoners is through many hundreds of short advertisements placed in newspapers by masters and enslavers who described and offered rewards for the capture and return of enslaved people who had escaped.
Often called ‘runaway slave’ advertisements, they are in many cases the only surviving record we have of a particular enslaved person, but even then they may tell us very little and all through the eyes of those who enslaved and pursued them.
Sometimes we don’t even know the name of the freedom-seeker. We might learn whether they were of African or South Asian descent, how well they spoke English, the clothes they had been wearing when they escaped, and in some cases whether they were scarred by slave brands or had been forced to wear metal slave collars around their necks. Many advertisements give the enslaved person’s age, from which we know that the average age of an escapee was just 16 years old.
It is all that we don’t know about London’s freedom seekers that has led to the development of Runaways London.
Working with research by University of Glasgow’s Runaway Slaves in Britain project, a team of young poets and artists of African and South Asian heritage have developed a series of poems and artworks responding to these advertisements.
Together they have reimagined the stories of London’s runaways, showing African and South Asian people to have been present in London, and that despite some of them little more than children, they dared to challenge their enslavers and run away into the City of London, eager to find better and freer lives.
Professor Simon P. Newman, Sir Denis Brogan Professor of American History (Emeritus), University of Glasgow said: “Slavery was very different in London, often polite and genteel, with young people dressed in expensive liveries as personal servants who advertised the wealth and success of those who claimed ownership of them.
“But it was still slavery and these people could easily be sent back to the places where enslavement was more savage and violent. Some tried to escape while in London yet we know very little about them. Who were they, where did they come from, what had they experienced, and what kind of home was London for them? These are the questions that inspire the Runaways London project.”
Working on the project are poets: Momtaza Mehri, Gboyega Odubanjo, Abena Essah, Memoona Zahid and Oluwaseun Olayiwola and artists: Olivia Twist and Tasia Graham.
The creative work produced by the poets and artists will be published in an anthology by Ink Sweat & Tears Press, edited by Fahad Al-Amoudi and Kate Birch. The anthology will be launched at an event on 21 October 2021 at the Museum of London Docklands alongside a film of the commissioned work and a resource pack for young people. The book, the film, the resource pack and a recording of the launch event will be made available for free online.