Thomas Walker (slave trader) explained

Thomas Walker
Birth Place:Henbury, Bristol, England
Death Place:at sea
Death Cause:Murder
Occupation:Slave trader
Spouse:Catherine McLelland
Children:2 sons, 1 daughter, including George E. Walker
Relatives:David Davis Walker (grandson)
George Herbert Walker (great-grandson)
George Herbert Walker Jr. (great-great-grandson)
George H. W. Bush (great-great-great-grandson)
George W. Bush (great-great-great-great-grandson)

Thomas Walker (1758–1797) (a.k.a. Beau Walker) was a British slave trader.

Early life

Thomas Walker was born 1758 in Henbury, now a suburb of Bristol, England.[1] [2]

Career

Walker worked as a slave trader, when Bristol was one of the three major slave trading ports in Britain.[2] He served as a slave ship Captain and was resident slave trader who operated in the Sierra Leone region of West Africa.[2]

He did much of his slave trading at Bunce Island, a British slave castle in the Sierra Leone River, owned at that time by the Company of John & Alexander Anderson, based in London.[2] He was involved in at least eleven slave trading voyages between 1784 and 1792, taking African captives from Sierra Leone to the British West Indies and the United States.[2]

Personal life

On 22 February 1785, Walker married Catherine McLelland (1770 - 1806) at St. Andrew's Church in Clifton.[2] She died on 18 October 1806, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a decade after her husband, leaving their older son as the guardian for his sister and a younger son, George E. Walker (1797–1864).[2]

Death and legacy

Walker was murdered in 1797 at sea in a mutiny.[2] He is an ancestor of two U.S. presidents, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush.[2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Baptismal record
  2. News: Slate. George W. Bush's Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather Was a Slave Trader. 2013-06-19.