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Bristol Slavery Trail

In order to navigate your way around the Bristol trail you can either click on the boxed numbers located on the map above or click on the links on the right-hand side of this page. Another way to search for specific areas of research is to enter the search term in the search box at the top of this page.

56 Corn Street (Trail Location 24) Corn Exchange (Trail Location 25) All Saints' Church (Trail Location 22) Corn Street (Trail Location 23) Commercial Rooms (Trail Location 27) Broad Street (Trail Location 28) St Stephen's Church (Trail Location 34) Court House, Taylor's Court (Trail Location 29) Edward Colston (Trail Location 32) Three Sugar Loaves (Trail Location 31) Lewin's Mead Sugar House (Trail Location 30) Colston Hall (Trail Location 33) Old Bank (Trail Location 26) Horn and Trumpet (Trail Location 35) Orchard Street (Trail Location 36) Bristol Cathedral (Trail Location 37) Georgian House (Trail Location 40) Hannah More School at No. 43 Park Street (Trail Location 38) Corner of Great George Street (Trail Location 39) Wills Memorial Building (Trail Location 41) City Museum and Art Gallery (Trail Location 42) Marsh Street (Trail Location 16) Merchant Venturers' House (Trail Location 17) Merchant Venturers' Almhouse (Trail Location 18) King Street (Trail Location 19) Theatre Royal (Trail Location 20) Seven Stars Pub (Trail Location 21) Custom House (Trail Location 15) American Consulate (Trail Location 14) 33-35 Queen Square: The Home of Captain Woodes Rogers (Trail Location 13) 29 Queen Square (Trail Location 12) Queen Square (Trail Location 11) St Mary Redcliffe Church (Trail Location 9) Guinea Street (Trail Location 7) Redcliffe Caves (Trail Location 5) Quaker Burial Ground (Trail Location 8) Redcliffe Parade (Trail Location 6) The Hole In The Wall (Trail Location 10) The Ostrich (Trail Location 4) Prince Street (Trail Location 2) Merchant's Wharf (Trail Location 3) The Quayside (Trail Location 1)

This is a town trail with a difference. It aims to show you what the handsome squares and quaint buildings of a pleasant English city have to do with one of the ugliest and most destructive events in human history… the Transatlantic slave trade.

Bristol is over 1000 years old. It has been a city for over 700 years. Its involvement with the Transatlantic slave trade lasted just over 150 years from around the 1660’s to the early 1800’s. So the history of Bristol is not just about the enslavement of Africans. Nor was Bristol the only slaving port in Britain. But it was the trade in Africans, and even more importantly, the trade in the goods from slave plantations, which helped to make Bristol such a beautiful and prosperous port. The places you will visit on this trail are real places and you will learn about those who walked these same streets before you — in the days of slavery.



Latest 5 assets added for Bristol Slavery Trail:
Corn Exchange (Trail Location 25):
Corn Exchange Clock Plaque – added 18 March 2008

Corn Exchange Clock Plaque, situated outside the main entrance to the Corn Exchange, reads:

THE CORN EXCHANGE CLOCK

The clock on this building with an extra minute
hand recalls early Victorian days, when Bristol was in
two minds about the correct time.

Although today we take Greenwich Mean Time or
British Summertime for granted before 1880 no
standard time existed in the British Isles. Every city
had its own local time, reckoned by the sun and signed
by church bells.

Bristol lies 2 degrees, 36 minutes west of the
Greenwich Meridian and so the sun reaches its noon
nearly peak 11 minutes later than in Greenwich. Before
the growth of railways, most people expected to spend
their lives close to home. travel by stagecoach or ship
was slow and uncomfortable. Timetables were vague.

For Bristolians a change came in June 1841, when
the first through train from London pulled into Temple
Meads Station. Brunel’s Great Western Railway began
to tempt people to travel, now they could go to London
in hours rather than days.

The Railways ran on London time (Greenwich
Mean Time). If you wanted to catch a train at noon
from Temple Meads you had to remember that it would
pull out at 11.49 Bristol Time.

To help Bristolians catch their trains, Bristol
Corporation arranged for the main public clock on the
Corn Exchange to show both local and Greenwich
Mean Time (Railway Time) with two minute hands.
Other clocks in Bristol adopted the same compromise.

In September 1852 Bristol adopted GMT and
Bristol time became the same as London.

Corn Exchange (Trail Location 25):
Exchange Clock – added 18 March 2008

Before the arrival of the railways there was no practical way of communicating information about time over a distance. When the telegraph made such communication possible, it became necessary for people living in one area to agree that they would not keep their own local time, but would all keep a time based on the local standard meridian. Bristol is at 2 35′ West of Greenwich, so when it is noon in Bristol it is just past 10 past noon (twelve) in London; therefore, the clock over the old Corn Exchange in Bristol has two minute hands. The black minute hand shows Greenwich Mean Time and the red minute hand shows Bristol time.

Corn Exchange (Trail Location 25):
Plaque Commemorating Exchange Architect John Wood – added 18 March 2008

This photograpgh shows the plaque that commemorated the Corn Exchange Architect John Wood. The plaque reads:

THE EXCHANGE

John Wood of Bath
This plaque was presented to the city of Bristol by the city of Bath to mark the bicentenary of his death May 1954

Commercial Rooms (Trail Location 27) :
Front view of Commercial Rooms – added 18 March 2008

Front view of Commercial Rooms

Court House, Tailor’s Court (Trail Location 29):
Access to Tailors Court – added 18 March 2008

A view of the access to Tailors Court, from Broad Street

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