1. Wallace, A General and Descriptive History, which agrees more with the evidence tlan Anstey's £36. This use of a slave price that is substantially too low accounts for much of the more defective estimates for this decade in relation to the others. But added to the low slave price, Anstey also assumed wrongly that “for that substantial portion of the British slave-trading fleet which supplied foreigners, there could be no question of a return lading in foreign-grown tropical produce…”
2. These 14 are John Dawson, William Boates, Thomas Seaman, James Percival, Thomas Tarleton, John Tarleton, Clayton Tarleton, Daniel Backhouse, William Harper, Robert Brade, Thomas Leyland, Thomas Molyneux, William Dickson, and Robert Bostock.
3. PRO, T.1/447/LA17, Memorial of the Merchants of Liverpool Trading to Africa to the Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury, Read 16 March 1765.
4. Dawson John , 17 January 1789.
5. French planters received slaves from British traders either through re-exports from Jamaica or directly through smuggling and various underground arrangements. This went on even when Britain and France were at war.