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  2. Jul 2, 2020 · In October 1562 CE John Hawkins led an expedition of three ships (Saloman, Jonas, and Swallow) to Guinea in West Africa where he acquired around 500 slaves for transportation to the Americas.

    • Mark Cartwright
  3. Here they enslaved around 1,200 Africans. According to slavers’ accounts of the time, these acts would have involved killing at least three times that number of people. Sir John Hawkins: shipbuilder. Hawkins had spent his life around ships and learning the particulars of sea warfare.

  4. Admiral Sir John Hawkins (also spelled Hawkyns) (1532 – 12 November 1595) was an English naval commander, naval administrator, privateer and slave trader. Hawkins pioneered, and was an early promoter of, English involvement in the Atlantic slave trade.

  5. Nov 14, 2012 · John Hawkins and the slave trade. John Hawkins traded slaves for commodities such as fish, which were then brought back to England to be sold. Hawkins followed a trade route from...

  6. In the 1560s, Hawkins and Drake travelled to West Africa and in 1564, Hawkins seized 300 people from the coast of West Africa, close to modern-day Sierra Leone, and he sold the captives in...

  7. Oct 10, 2019 · In October of 1562, John Hawkins of Plymouth became the first English sailor known to have obtained African slaves – approximately 300 in Sierra Leone – for sale in the West Indies.

  8. John Hawkins (born in Plymouth in 1532) conducted the first of his three slave raids on the coast of West Africa in 1562, capturing people and taking them across the Atlantic for sale in Hispaniola. Hawkins is sometimes credited with inventing the triangular slave trade, making a profit on each leg of the voyage.