Edward Parr
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Edward Parr (born 26 February 1718; ?died 1799) was an English slave trader and merchant. He was involved in 51 slave voyages, operating out of the Port of Liverpool between 1750 and 1768. Parr owned a slave ship called ''Briton'', whose captain employed an African pirate called Captain Lemma Lemma to capture and enslave people with his war canoes. Parr was a member of the African Company of Merchants.


Early life

Parr was born in Liverpool, the son of Jonas Parr, apothecary, of Castle Street. His grandfather was also Edward Parr, of Haysom in
Rainford Rainford is a village and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of St Helens, Merseyside, England, north of St Helens. At the 2011 Census, the population was 7,779. Within the boundaries of the historic county of Lancashire, the ear ...
, of a family settled there as small landowners in the 15th century, established in Liverpool as merchants and shipowners by the late 17th century. He was a first cousin of the gunmaker John Parr.


Slave trade

Edward Parr continued his father's business as an apothecary and general merchant in Castle Street, Liverpool. He became a slave trader with West Africa, the Caribbean and Chesapeake Bay, and reputedly became the second richest man in Liverpool, as documented in the letter books of his assistant, Joshua Dixon. He was involved in 51 slave voyages between the years of 1750 and 1768. Parr and John Welch owned a slave-ship called ''Briton'' and in 1762 it was sent on a slave voyage to the Kingdom of Whydah in West Africa. One day in 1763, the ''Briton'' was moored in the
Bight of Benin The Bight of Benin or Bay of Benin is a bight in the Gulf of Guinea area on the western African coast that derives its name from the historical Kingdom of Benin. Geography It extends eastward for about from Cape St. Paul to the Nun outlet of t ...
being surrounded by 10 war canoes. The war canoes were owned by Captain Lemma Lemma, an African pirate leader who captured people and sold them to the slave traders. The captain of the ''Briton'', William Bagshaw, had been entertaining Lemma Lemma for 10 days while he and his men captured people. Bagshaw had been offering food, drink, hospitality and gifts in order to encourage Lemma Lemma. Three people in a canoe came sailing down the River Formosa, oblivious to the danger they were in. Upon sighting them, Lemma Lemma ordered his crew to hunt them down and bring them to the ''Briton''. The three people captured were an elderly father and his adult son and daughter. Bagshaw agreed to buy the two younger people but refused to buy the old man. Upon completion of the sale Lemma Lemma sent the old man back to his war canoe and ordered that "his head was laid on one of the thwarts of the boat, and chopped off". Thereafter his head and body were thrown overboard, his son and daughter were taken to
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in Virginia, where they were sold into slavery. Parr was a member of the African Company of Merchants whose purpose was to lobby in favour of the slave trade. The first meeting of the company took place in Liverpool, on 14 July 1777. The Committee meeting took place every Monday morning in Liverpool Town Hall. The other members included William Gregson, John Dobson, his cousin
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, John Backhouse and James Caruthers. On 13 February 1759, Edward Parr and forty-four other Liverpool merchants and shipowners wrote a letter to Robert Williamson of '' Williamson's Liverpool Advertiser''. Britain was involved in the Seven Years' War and they were asking him not to print a list of ships sailing from the port. They remarked they had "too much reason to apprehend" that it had "been of very bad consequence this war." In 1749, a French vessel called ''Le Lion D'Or'' was captured by a Liverpool privateer. It was then converted into a whaling vessel and renamed the ''Golden Lion''. She became Liverpool's first whaling vessel. In 1750, ''Golden Lion'' sailed from Liverpool to a fishery off Greenland on its first whaling voyage. Edward Parr and other slave traders took a share of the vessel. Gomer Williams opines "for one whale's blubber melted by their agency, they might have counted thousands of human hearts either stilled for ever, or crushed by lifelong slavery."


References


Sources

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Parr, Edward 1799 deaths Date of birth missing Year of birth missing 18th-century English businesspeople African Company of Merchants Businesspeople from Lancashire English businesspeople in shipping English slave traders People from Rainford