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Richmond Slave Trail

Walking Tour
Creator(s)
Richmond City Council
Type
Resource
Year
1998

Richmond, Virginia

Richmond Slave Trail is a walking trail that chronicles the history of the trade of enslaved Africans from Africa to Virginia until 1775, and away from Virginia, especially Richmond, to other locations in the Americas until 1865.

It begins at Manchester Docks, a major port in the massive downriver Slave Trade that made Richmond the largest source of enslaved Africans on the east coast of America from 1830 to 1860. The trail then follows a route through the slave markets of Richmond, beside the Reconciliation Statue commemorating the international triangular slave trade, past Lumpkin's Slave Jail and the Negro Burial Ground to First African Baptist Church, a center of African-American life in pre-Civil War Richmond.

Trail PDF

City of Richmond - Slave Trail Commission

Virginians for Reconciliation

Elegba Folklore Society

Virginia.org