A visual exploration of how the growth of Manchester as an industrial city had a colossal human cost, the scale of which is difficult to comprehend

In little more than a century, Manchester grew from a small market town into the world’s first industrial city. While the factors behind this transformation were complex, what’s clear is how integral systems of racial slavery in the Americas were to British industrialisation: the raw materials they produced, the market demand they created and the capital they generated for reinvestment. These two worlds are connected by an ironclad thread.

The Manchester Guardian’s founder and early backers were thoroughly embedded, leading members of the city’s industrial elite. Much of their wealth and platform were built on profits derived from cotton importation, the textile industry and, in one case, plantation ownership.

This interactive is an attempt to explain those connections and their wider impact to raise awareness of an often neglected part of history.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

England up and running at Euro 2020 as Raheem Sterling strike sinks Croatia

England have kicked off their Euro 2020 campaign in style with a…

Solar parks could be used to boost bumblebee numbers, study suggests

Lancaster University researchers say sowing wildflowers alongside panels would have benefits for…

Know Your Sh!t review – a cheery odyssey into other peoples’ poo

Avoid eating chocolate ice-cream while watching this surprisingly poignant gut health show,…

National Grid poised to start emergency winter plan as energy prices soar

Scheme rewards businesses and households that shift power usage away from times…