Africans have been brought to Charleston on…
1770 CE
Africans have been brought to Charleston on the Middle Passage, first as servants, then as slaves, especially Wolof, Yoruba, Fula, Igbo, Malinke, and other peoples of the Windward Coast.
The port of Charleston is the main dropping point for Africans captured and transported to the United States for sale as slaves.
Charleston had by the mid-eighteenth century become a bustling trade center, the hub of the Atlantic trade for the southern colonies, and the wealthiest and largest city south of Philadelphia.
It is by 1770 the fourth largest port in the colonies, after only Boston, New York, and Philadelphia, with a population of eleven thousand, slightly more than half of that enslaved people.
The Charleston Library Society helps establish the College of Charleston in 1770, the oldest college in South Carolina and the oldest municipally supported college in the United States.