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Reference
(The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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Division within FO
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Title
(The name of the record)
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Records of the Slave Trade and African Departments
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Date
(When the record was created)
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1816-1913
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Description
(What the record is about)
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Contains records of the Slave Trade and African Departments relating to African affairs including the suppression of the slave trade. Correspondence of Slave Trade and African Departments up to 1892 is in FO 84. Correspondence of the African Department from 1906 to 1913 is in FO 367
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Related material
(A cross-reference to other related records)
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The 'Africa' series of correspondence with diplomatic and consular representatives in countries outside Africa from 1893 to 1900, and correspondence relating to particular African countries appears in the appropriate series within the general correspondence.
For East Africa correspondence, 1893-1905 see
FO 107
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Separated material
(A cross-reference between records that are related by provenance but now kept separately)
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Records of African Departments 1893-1905 are in
FO 2
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Held by
(Who holds the record)
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The National Archives, Kew
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Legal status
(A note as to whether the record being described is a Public Record or not)
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Public Record(s)
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Language
(The language of the record)
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English
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Physical description
(The amount and form of the record)
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2 series
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Subjects
(Categories and themes found in our collection (our subject list is under development, and some records may have no subjects or fewer than expected))
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- Topics
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Trade and commerce
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Slavery
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Administrative / biographical background
(Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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The Slave Trade Department was originally concerned with executing the various treaties for the suppression of the slave trade which arose out of the Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815. Its work was initially expected to be temporary and it was not placed on the establishment of the Foreign Office until 1841. However as early as 1824 a special annual allowance was paid to the clerk who superintended the slave trade business, together with a lump sum in recognition of his having conducted that business over the previous five years.
The department gradually assumed the general direction of most other business relating to Africa. Between 1872 and 1880 it combined with the Consular Department as the Consular and Slave Trade Department; in 1880 it became the Slave Trade and Sanitary Department; between 1882 and 1893 it combined once more with the Consular Department as the Consular and African (East and West) Department.
In 1893 it became separate once more as the African (East and West) Department. In June 1900 it was divided into the African Department, responsible for South-East, West and South-West Africa, and the African Protectorates Department, under a superintendent of protectorates, responsible for the administration of East Africa, Uganda, British Central Africa and Somaliland.
In April 1905 the African Protectorates Department was abolished when the Colonial Office assumed responsibility for all African protectorates except Zanzibar, which remained a Foreign Office responsibility until January 1914. The African Department was abolished at the end of 1913, its remaining functions being transferred to the American and later Egyptian (Political) Departments.
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Record URL
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https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C632/