Liverpool street plaque explaining city’s links to slave trade installed

Liverpool street plaque explaining city’s links to slave trade installed
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Tom Evans

By Tom Evans


Published: 05/04/2022

- 15:19

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:45

The sign makes clear that Liverpool's Central Library and World Museum have their origins in wealth accrued through slavery

A plaque acknowledging Liverpool’s links to slavery has been installed on a street named after a slave owner.

The sign on William Brown Street, near the city’s Central Library and World Museum, is the first in a series of 10 which will be placed around Liverpool.


It reads: “Liverpool’s Central Library and World Museum have their origins in wealth accrued through slavery.

“William Brown became one of the main importers of slave-produced cotton into Liverpool.

“The Brown family also owned many enslaved people on their plantations in the US.

“William Brown Street was named after him for funding these buildings.”

Andrew Lynch (2nd left) the son of Eric Lynch during the unveiling of the bronze plaque close to the World Museum on William Brown Street, Liverpool, which explains the history behind the street name and its origins with the slave trade. It is the first of around ten streets which will become home to an 'Eric Scott Lynch Slavery Histories' plaque - named in honour of the activist and historian who passed away last year. Picture date: Tuesday April 5, 2022.
Andrew Lynch (2nd left) the son of Eric Lynch during the unveiling of the bronze plaque close to the World Museum on William Brown Street, Liverpool, which explains the history behind the street name and its origins with the slave trade. It is the first of around ten streets which will become home to an 'Eric Scott Lynch Slavery Histories' plaque - named in honour of the activist and historian who passed away last year. Picture date: Tuesday April 5, 2022.
Peter Byrne

A newly unveiled bronze plaque close to the World Museum on William Brown Street, Liverpool, which explains the history behind the street name and its origins with the slave trade. It is the first of around ten streets which will become home to an 'Eric Scott Lynch Slavery Histories' plaque - named in honour of the activist and historian who passed away last year. Picture date: Tuesday April 5, 2022.
A newly unveiled bronze plaque close to the World Museum on William Brown Street, Liverpool, which explains the history behind the street name and its origins with the slave trade. It is the first of around ten streets which will become home to an 'Eric Scott Lynch Slavery Histories' plaque - named in honour of the activist and historian who passed away last year. Picture date: Tuesday April 5, 2022.
Peter Byrne

The sign is the first of the Eric Lynch Slavery Histories plaques, named after the activist and historian who identified areas of the city directly linked with the slave economy.

Andrew Lynch, son of Mr Lynch, who died last year, was at the unveiling on Tuesday.

He said: “These plaques stand testament to the educational work that my father Eric Scott Lynch carried out.

“Over many years, he strove to give the people of Liverpool a deeper understanding of the central role the city played in shaping the modern world.

“The enormous wealth generated by slavery and imperial interests built the city into a major trade hub and financed many of the industries that were to become the cornerstone of the industrial revolution.

“This reminds us that Liverpool is truly a world city, with the labour of Africans and people of African descent being a key part of our story.”

Liverpool City Council passed a motion in January 2020 to commit to the placing of plaques to improve understanding of the city’s heritage and its links to slavery.

Mayor of Liverpool Joanne Anderson said the unveiling of the plaque was a “milestone moment”.

She said: “We pledged to be open and transparent about this city’s role in the transatlantic slave trade, and the plaques are an important step forward.

“This understanding of our past is key, and only when we fully acknowledge and accept it, can we move forward.”

Later this month, the city will hold a series of events including a music day and conference as part of Liverpool Against Racism.

Following the death of George Floyd in the US in May 2020, the Black Lives Matter movement sparked debate on Britain’s historic links with the slave trade and in Bristol demonstrators toppled a statue of slave trader Edward Colston.

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