Early American Trade
Created | Updated Apr 16, 2007
The inclusion of the Americas in the European trading circuit expanded Western Europe's position of power in Afro-Eurasia. The Americas provided a fresh source of wealth in the form of silver and gold, and allowed for the cultivation of crops such as sugar. The discovery of America also led to increased trading in items such as fur, and introduced new goods, especially tobacco. The addition of America to the global trading network also provided the incentive to increase one of the world's most significant cultural and historical upheavals - the trade of human beings as commodities.
Silver
Between 1500 and 1800 85% of the world's silver supply was obtained in European-controlled America, either from the Inca and Aztec empires or in forced-labour silver mines such as Potosi. The largest exporters of silver were the Spanish settlements in Central and South America. The Spanish crown claimed 20% of the silver in taxes, which amounted to Spain's entire budget in the 1560s.
To secure the silver in America, Spain built a militarized version of an Italian trade diaspora, a route which ran from the mining towns to Santo Domingo, Panama, Veracruz and Mexico City. The silver was carried in convoys and pack trains to protect it from pirates. To ensure the safety of the silver, large sturdy ships were built to withstand storms and pirate attacks. The silver was spread over several ships to reduce the risk of losing large amounts of silver in shipwrecks. The extra space left in the large ships allowed the shipping of below-cost goods which normally wouldn't have been exported.
Spain shipped 330,000 kilograms of silver to Europe each year. In the mid 1500s 150,000 kilograms was officially shipped from Acapulco to Manila. The real figure was possibly twice that. From Europe, American silver was shipped to India, China, Levant, and the Ottoman Empire. The silver was used to purchase goods, as European manufactured goods were not in demand in Asia and the Middle East. From the mid seventeenth century around 28 million kilograms of silver was imported to China.
Gold
In Europe, the gold and silver supply declined in the sixteenth century, and the majority of the world's silver and gold was then supplied by America. In the 1530s in Europe, about 100,000 kilograms of gold and silver was produced, while only 20,000 kilograms a year was 'obtained' in West Africa. Between 1500 and 1800 70% of the world's gold supply came from the Americas. The first supply of gold from America was obtained by melting down Aztec and Inca treasures in Central and South America. In the 1690s gold was discovered in Brazil, and by the 1720s, the country was producing 10 tons of gold a year. The Andean gold mine in the Spanish colony was worked by enforced native labour, and only a relatively small number of African slaves worked in gold mining. The discovery of gold in California in 1848 sparked a gold rush in the state. In 1852, 81 million dollars worth of gold had been found by 100,000 free miners.
Sugar
Sugar was first brought to the Americas in 1493, on Columbus' second journey, and was first planted on Santo Domingo. In 1515, in an attempt to turn the island into a manufacturer of refined sugar, Gonzalo de Vellosa imported a water or animal powered mill, and by the 1530s there were 34 mills on the island. The Spanish settlements at Cuba, Puerto Rico and Jamaica also developed mills, and Spain was one of the world's largest producers of sugar until 1650, when the Portuguese colony in Brazil and the English and French colonies overtook the Spanish in sugar production. By 1700 four fifths of Europe's sugar imports came from British and French colonies in America.
Brazil's climate and soil content meant that sugar grew easily. By 1580, Brazil produced three times more sugar than the Atlantic islands Madeira and São Tome combined. In Brazil, Native Americans were worked in sugar plantations and owned by private settlers until the supply of native slaves began to dry up. The Portuguese increased the number of slaves imported from Africa, and by 1630, there were 60,000 slaves in Brazil.
Barbados was first settled in 1624 and by 1645 half the island consisted of sugar plantations. Two-thirds of Britain's sugar supply was produced in Barbados by the mid 1650s, and Barbados was exporting as much sugar as all of Brazil. The sugar at Barbados was produced by 20,000 slaves in the mid 1650s, and by the 1680s there were 50,000 slaves working on the plantations. The slaves made up three quarters of the island's population. They worked 18 hour days, mostly in gangs of 10 or more.
The consumption of sugar in Europe was originally only meant for medicinal, condiment, ritual, or display purposes, but it became more common as the supply grew and the price decreased. By the mid 1700s sugar was the most valuable trading commodity in Europe, and accounted for one fifth of all European imports by the 1780s. Between 1710 and 1770 sugar consumption in Europe increased five-fold, and by the mid eighteenth century over half of Britain's overseas trade consisted of sugar and tobacco. In 1700 four pounds of sugar per person per year was consumed in England, and by 1800 that figure had increased to 18 pounds.
Fur
In North America, especially in New France (Canada) and New Amsterdam (New York), the fur trade provided Europe with the fur of animals such as ermine, bear, otter, fox, squirrel and beaver. The fur traders employed Native Americans to hunt and trap game, and in some cases, the French traders lived and worked with the Native peoples. Large parts of America were joined together by a series of forts and trading posts.
Tobacco
Europeans first picked up the habit of smoking tobacco from the Native Americans, and the growing of tobacco soon became the most profitable crop in the North American colonies. Tobacco plantations required fewer slaves than sugar plantations. The amount of tobacco produced in Maryland and Virginia increased threefold between 1710 and 1760.
Slaves
The trade of humans as profitable commodities was one of the most important parts of the trading system. The use of slaves made huge profits possible within both the plantation and mining endeavors.
In 1663 the 'Company of Royal Adventurers to Africa' was given the monopoly of the slave trade to the English colonies in America. In 1672 the C.R.A.A. was replaced by the 'Royal African Company' which by the 1690s had bought 125,000 slaves in Africa. In the 1690s there were a total of 122,000 slaves in French and British colonies, and by 1800 there were 1,155,000.
In Africa, African and mixed-blood traders from the coasts raided interior towns with Western firearms and kidnapped people for the slave trade. While some African leaders participated in the slave trade, some attempted to curb or regulate the trade. The Portuguese Crown encouraged the king of the Congo in his efforts to cease the raiding, but the Portuguese traders encouraged individual chiefs to raid other tribes. The king of the Congo in a letter to the king of Portugal details the kidnapping of people from his land:
And each day these merchants take our citizens, native to the land and children of our nobles and vassals, and our relations, because they are thieves and men of bad conscience ... They take them to sell.
The prices of the slaves in Africa was controlled by the African traders, and was usually between three and fifteen pounds. At the commencement of the slave trade, slavers could make up to 10% profit, which was on par with the profits made by the planters in America. Slavers traded iron, firearms, cloth, paper, rum and tobacco for slaves.
The slave trade increased because it was considered to be more profitable to buy adult slaves than to allow or encourage slaves in America to have children. It was calculated that it would cost twice as much to raise a child to a suitable age for work than it cost to buy an adult slave. The slaves themselves used contraception as a form of resistance, and as a result, only one slave child was born in America for every six slaves that died. The trading of humans as commodities was very profitable, and the historian Clive Ponting rather callously comments that 'although it entailed a massive waste of human life and immense suffering it was, from a purely commercial point of view, incredibly successful'1.
Britain controlled 40% of the slave trade, Portugal controlled one third, and France controlled one fifth. One third of the slaves went to Brazil, one quarter each went to the French colonies and the British colonies in the West Indies and 5% went to the northern American mainland. Two thirds of the slaves were male, and one quarter were children.
The Portuguese in Brazil imported slaves for use on their sugar plantations, and also sold some on to Spanish America. In the early seventeenth century the slave trade was very profitable, as the slaves could be bought for a relatively cheap price in Africa. Slavers could make a tenfold profit. When gold was discovered in Brazil, more slaves were imported to work in the mines, and by 1750 slaves made up one third of Brazil's population, and totaled half a million.
The addition of the Americas to the world trading network provided Europe with new goods such as tobacco, and greatly increased the availability of products such as sugar and fur. America became a ready source for precious metals, especially silver. The discovery of the Americas also provided the opportunity to increase the profitability of the slave trade.