Pikworo Slave camp

The Pikworo Slave camp was founded in 1704 and was active until 1845. It is located in Paga nania, about 3 kilometers west of Paga in the Upper East Region of Ghana.[1] It was originally developed as a slave transit center where slaves were auctioned and later resold in the Salaga Slave market after walking about 150km to the south. They are later moved to the coast for shipment.[2][3]

Pikworo slave camp in the upper east region of Ghana.

History

Pikworo slave camp was a slave trading camp where people were sold to English, French and Dutch slave traders.[4]

Eating Plates of Slaves at Pikworo Slave Camp

Special Features

Eating Bowls Man made scoops in rocks served as eating plates or bowls for slaves at the camp. The larger the size of the scoop the higher the number of slaves to eat from the scoop.[5]

A Spring at the Pikworo slave camp

A gash in a large rock at the camp served as a source of water for cooking.[4]

gollark: Alternatively, make some sort of small SSD turntable with a known RPM.
gollark: Plot the RPM of various hard drives against Mbps sequential IO rate, draw line, put SSD's sequential IO rate on, get RPM.
gollark: Linear regression.
gollark: Can you not use the power of the interweb and access it remotely?
gollark: With enough adapters *anything* can have HDMI support.

See also

References

  1. Editor (2016-03-21). "Paga Crocodile Pond". touringghana.com. Retrieved 2020-08-11.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. Easy Track Ghana. "History & Diaspora of Ghana". Easy Track Ghana.
  3. "Visit Ghana | Zenga (Paga) Crocodile Pond". Visit Ghana. Retrieved 2020-08-11.
  4. Bessinger, Julian. "The Pikworo Slave Camp". Africa Dispatch.
  5. iddrisu (2018-01-22). "The Pikworo Slave Camp at Paga-Nania, Jan 20". Hist 256: Slavery in Ghana (Interim 2018). Retrieved 2019-11-14.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.