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OLAUDAH EQUIANO OR
GUSTAVUS VASSA
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![]() A watercolour of St. Andrew's Church dating from about the time of the Abolition of Slavery in 1810. |
A Biography of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa 'The African'
Olaudah Equiano was born c.1745 in the Eboe Lands of South Eastern Nigeria. He was captured in c.1755, aged ten by neighbouring people and sold to English slave traders. At the age of 12 he was taken to the West Indies and within a few days, he had been transported to Virginia and sold to a local plantation owner.
After about a month he was sold on to a visiting British Naval Officer called Michael Henry Pascal, who brought him to London (after docking in Falmouth) in 1757: he then accompanied Pascal on many naval and military actions, notably those in the Seven Years War, and became a proficient able seaman. During this time Pascal renamed him 'Gustavus Vassa' after a 16th-century Swedish nobleman who successfully led the Swedes in a war of independence against the Danes to become the first Swedish King - an ironic, almost cruel renaming on behalf of Pascal. In between his voyages he spent his time in Westminster, London in the company of two sisters who had taken him under their wing and taught him how to read as well as sending him to school. He was baptised in 1759, with his new name of 'Gustavus Vassa' at St. Margaret’s Church, St. Margaret Street, Westminster, London.

Recent research has shown that it is from these Baptism records in London as well as records of naval muster rolls that Equiano may in fact have been born in Carolina, USA. This evidence has questioned whether he was ever captured in Nigeria as a young boy and enslaved as he states in his book. Historians have never discredited the accuracy of Equiano's narrative, nor the power it had to support the abolitionist cause so successfully, particularly in Britain during the 1790's. However, parts of Equiano's account of the Middle Passage may have been based on already published accounts or the experiences of those he knew around him. It's possible that at one time he may have found it in his self-interest to lie about his real birthplace but it could also have simply been a case of language barriers. The debate still wrangles on...but the outcome of his efforts to help end the slave trade will never be forgotten.
After the end of the Seven Years War, in 1762, Pascal fell back on his promise to free Equiano and sold him onto slavery in the West Indies. During this time, Equiano continued travelling on board ships as a slave between North America, the West Indies and the Mediterranean. He was then acquired for the sum of £40 by Robert King, a Quaker Merchant from Philadelphia who traded in the Caribbean. In 1765, King promised Equiano his freedom if he could amass the £40 he had initially paid for him thinking this would be a virtually impossible task. During his enslavement, King allowed him to trade for himself on the side and in due course Equiano managed to amass the £40 required to buy his own freedom. Unlike Henry Pascal, King did not fall back on his promise and in 1766 at Monserrat in the Caribbean Islands of Leeward, at the tender age of 21, Equiano was finally a free man. He was asked to continue to work on board ship as an able-bodied seaman and continued travelling on board ships around North America and the West Indies. After a shipwreck in the Bahamas he purchased his passage to England where he became a hairdresser in London c.1767.
As a free man Equiano often returned to the sea to trade and during this time, took part in voyages to the West Indies and the Mediterranean. In 1773, he joined a voyage of exploration under the command of John Phipps to try to find a northwest passage to India across the North Pole (an extraordinary venture in the 18th century). Interestingly, a young Horatio Nelson was also present onboard ship for this exploratory trip. Equiano converted to Methodism in about 1774. The next year, he helped set up a plantation in Central America, where he acted as the buyer and overseer of the black slaves. By 1777 he had resigned from this job and returned to London where he became involved in a plan to resettle poor blacks in Sierra Leone.

His attempt to work for the Sierra Leone resettlement scheme (for London's destitute blacks) was short-lived since he was sacked for standing up for black rights in 1777. He started his anti-slavery activities around this time - first trying to free the black sea-cook, John Annis. From 1787, he devoted himself to the anti-slavery cause, going on lengthy speaking tours in order to win over public opinion. His personal account, 'The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African', published in 1789, was a "uniquely detailed account of an African's movement out of slavery". It was the most important single literary contribution to the campaign for the abolition of slavery and one of the earliest books published by a black African writer.
For the first time the case for abolition, presented by a black writer in a popular form, reached a wide reading public and was immediately popular. It was, for instance, the last book read by John Wesley before his death. And it was highly effective in rousing public opinion. "We entertain no doubt of the general authenticity of this very intelligent African's interesting story. The narrative wears an honest face ... [and] seems calculated to increase the odium [hostility] that hath been excited against the West-India planters," wrote the 'Monthly Review'. The book established Equiano as a chief spokesman for Britain's blacks.
When his book was published he was living in a house on what was then 10 Union Street, West Marylebone, London which is now 73 Riding House Street, Westminster, London. His former residence is now marked by a green commemorative plaque courtesy of The City Of Westminster which was officially unveiled on 11th October 2000 as part of London's Annual Black History Month celebrations.
Marriage and Family in Soham, Cambridgeshire

The marriage certificate of Gustavus Vassa and Susannah Cullen at St
Andrew's Church, Soham - 7th April 1792
Quite how such an eminent member of London's abolition movement came to reside in Soham remains a mystery, perhaps by a chance meeting in Cambridge during one of his many book tours. On 7th April 1792, Gustavus Vassa - An African (Bachelor of St. Martin in the Fields) married Susannah Cullen (Spinster of the Parish of Soham) at St. Andrew's Church, Soham Cambridgeshire. The marriage was by special licence and witnessed by Francis Bland and Thomas Cullen. Previous accounts of this marriage have recorded the bride as coming from either Ely or Fordham, whereas the actual record shows Susannah as 'Spinster of the Parish of Soham'. Unfortunately, as there is no record of her birth or baptism in the Parish, it is likely that she came to Soham with her parents as an infant, probably from the nearby village of Fordham (Cullen or Collen being a local name).

Commemorative Plaque in St Andrew's Church, Soham
Unveiled on 17th April 2007 by Vicar, Tim Alban Jones MBE
& Arthur Torrington from The Equiano Society
Evidence to suggest that the couple took up residence in Soham comes from the fact that both of their children were born and baptised here. Their firstborn, Anna Maria arrived on 16th October 1793, and was baptised in St. Andrew's Church, Soham on 30th January 1794. Their second child, Joanna was born on 11th April 1795, and was baptised in St. Andrew's Church, Soham on 29th April 1795. Susannah was always thought to have died during Joanna's birth, however, records show that she died a year later on 21st February 1796. She is buried in the Fordham Road Cemetery at Soham with her gravestone marked as 'Susanna Vassa, Wife of Gustavus the African, aged 34 years'.
One of Equiano's last London addresses appears to have been Plaisters Hall in the City of London from where he drew up his will on 28th May 1796 after the death of his wife. He then moved to John Street, Tottenham Court Road, London which is close to Whitefield's Methodist Chapel (where there is a small, recent memorial). The following year, in 1797, Gustavus Vassa died at the age of 52. His death was recorded in Paddington Street, Middlesex, London on 31st March 1797 but the whereabouts of his burial is still unknown. Sadly, his eldest daughter Anna Maria Vassa, died just a few months later on 21st July 1797 aged just four years and is buried at St. Andrew's Church, Chesterton, Cambridge where there is a commemorative plaque in her memory.
Anna Maria Vassa - b.1793 d.1797
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Near this Place
Lies Interred
Anna Maria Vassa
Daughter of Gustavus Vassa, the African
She Died July 21 1797
Aged 4 Years
Should simple village rhymes attract thine
eye,
Stranger, as thoughtfully thou passest by,
Know that there lies beside this humble stone
A child of colour haply not thine own.
Her father born of Afric's sun-burnt race,
Torn from his native field, ah foul disgrace:
Through various toils, at length to Britain came
Espoused, so Heaven ordain'd, an English dame,
And follow'd Christ; their hope two infants dear.
But one, a hapless orphan, slumbers here.
To bury her the village children came.
And dropp'd choice flowers, and lisp'd her early fame;
And some that lov'd her most, as if unblest,
Bedew'd with tears the white wreath on their breast;
But she is gone and dwells in that abode,
Where some of every clime shall joy in God.
Joanna Vassa - b.1795 d.1857
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The surviving daughter, Joanna Vassa, inherited a sizable estate from the wealth her father had accumulated from the sale of his book, equivalent to around £100,000 in today's money. She went on to marry The Reverend Henry Bromley and they ran a Congregational Chapel at Clavering near Saffron Walden in Essex, before moving to London in 1845. Joanna died on 10th March 1857 at the age of 61 and was buried at Abney Park Cemetery in Stoke Newington on 16th March 1857, her husband Henry survived her for 20 years and was eventually buried alongside her on 12th February 1878. It's not yet known whether they had any children.
The Slave Trade was finally abolished in England, 10 years after the death of Olaudah Equiano, in 1807.
It took a further forty years to see the abolition in the British colonies.
Details taken from his
autobiography
'The Interesting Narrative of the life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa,
the African 1789'
'The Extraordinary Equiano' - BBC Documentary About Olaudah Equiano
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A hour long documentary about Olaudah Equiano was recently commissioned by the BBC. Called "The Extraordinary Equiano", it details the amazing life of the 18th Century freed African Slave, Author and Anti-Slavery Campaigner. A film crew visited Soham on Sunday 15th May 2005 to film a scene for the documentary which centred on the wedding of Gustavus Vassa "The African" and Susannah Cullen "Spinster of the Parish of Soham" which originally took place at St. Andrew's Church on 7th April 1792. The picture shows Aryon Bakare (from BBC1 lunchtime show 'Doctors') playing the part of Olaudah Equiano and Camilla Corbett playing Susannah Cullen's character. |
The Royal Mail - Abolition of Slavery Commemorative Stamps
To coincide with the 200th Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade on British Ships, The Royal Mail released a special collectors edition of stamps on 22nd March 2007 featuring six prominent abolitionists The First Class stamp featured Abolitionists William Wilberforce & Olaudah Equiano, the 50p stamp featured Thomas Clarkson & Granville Sharp and the 72p stamp featured Hannah More & Ignatius Sancho
4th Great Black Briton - Olaudah Equiano
Olaudah Equiano has been voted 'The 4th Greatest Black Briton'
of all time.

www.100greatblackbritons.com
Further Reading on Olaudah Equiano
For further reading on
Olaudah Equiano please visit the following Websites:-
www.brycchancarey.com/equiano/
www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/leisure/archives/online/slavery/gustavusvassa.htm
www.black-history-month.co.uk/articles/olaudah_equiano.html
Alternatively books can be bought from www.amazon.co.uk by clicking the links below:-
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Interesting Narrative
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The African :
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Life of Olaudah Equiano,
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The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa,
the African
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The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano (1789)
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The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudiah Equiano, or Gustav Vassa,
the African Shelly Eversley (Editor) Paperback (May 2004) Random House USA Inc; 0393974944 |