Digitized Collection
- Advert in The Daily Journal for the sale at Lloyd’s Coffee House of the slave ship ‘Ann and Elizabeth’
- Advert in The London Gazette for a freedom-seeker
- Advert in The London Gazette for a freedom-seeker, described as a ‘Runaway’ to be returned to Edward Lloyd’s Coffee House
- Advert in The London Gazette for a freedom-seeker, Will, to be returned to Edward Lloyd’s Coffee House
- Advert in the London Gazette for the sale at Lloyd’s Coffee House of the ship ‘James and Frances/Francis’, used as a slave ship
- Advert in the London Gazette for the sale at Lloyd’s Coffee House of the ship ‘Sidney’, used as a slave ship
- A Map of Lime Street ward
- Broadside for Sale by Candle of a Ship
- Certificate for appointing a Lloyd’s Agent in Antigua
- Collection of nine ivory entry tickets for Subscribers or Substitutes at Lloyd’s at the Royal Exchange
- Commemorative Royal Exchange Opening Medal
- Deed for Edward Lloyd
- Deed of sale of one sixteenth of the ship ‘Charming Sally’
- Engraving and plan of the second Royal Exchange
- Letter from Thomas Dunn about his plantations in Jamaica to Andrew Milne of Lloyd’s Coffee House
- Life insurance policy for Alfred, an enslaved person in the USA
- Lloyd’s Candlestick
- Policy for the ship ‘Anne Gally’
- Policy for the ship ‘Claude Scott’
- Policy for the ship ‘Claude Scott’
- Policy for the ship ‘Diogenes’
- Policy for the ship ‘Douglas’
- Policy for the ship ‘Jupiter’
- Policy for the ship ‘Kingsmill’
- Policy for the ship ‘Kingsmill’
- Policy for the ship ‘Kingsmill’
- Policy for the ship ‘Lady’s Adventure’
- Policy for the ship ‘Lord Mansfield’
- Policy for the ship ‘Nelly’
- Policy for the ship ‘Ship or Ships’
- Portrait of Joseph Marryat, (1757–1824), attributed to John Hayes (1786–1866)
- Printed circular letter from Charles D Davis
- Print of ‘The Inside View of the Royal Exchange at London’
- Print of a portrait of Miles Peter Andrews
- Print of East India House
- Print of East India House, from Leadenhall Street
- Print of the inside of the second Royal Exchange
- Print of the interior quadrangle of the third Royal Exchange
- Print of the Sale Room at East India House by Rowlandson and Pugin
- Print of the second Royal Exchange
- Print of the second Royal Exchange
- Record of a Bill of Lading for 100 enslaved people
- Silver cup and cover presented by Lloyd’s underwriters to the slave ship captain, Hugh Crow
- Silver Cup and Cover Presented by Lloyd’s Underwriters to Captain Hugh Crow
- Slave ship policies for the Guipuzcoa
- The Roll of Lloyd’s, 1771-1930, compiled and annotated by Warren R Dawson, FRSE, FSA, Honorary Librarian to the Corporation of Lloyd’s
- Underwriters risk book, probably of Solomon d’Aguilar
- Underwriters risk book of Clagett & Pratt
- Underwriters risk book of Clagett & Pratt
- Underwriters risk book of Horatio Clagett
Reference Number: N0131
Date: 1800
Extent: 2 items, cup and cover
Materials: Silver
Size: 580(h) x 370(w) mm, 5735 grammes approximately
Provenance: Presented to Lloyd’s by S J Aubrey, 10th April 1935
Description: George III silver cup and cover with the inscription in an oval cartouche with rope twist boarders ‘Presented by the Underwriters of Lloyd’s Coffee House to Captain Hugh Crow, for his Gallant Conduct in defending the Ship Will against a French Privateer on his Voyage from Africa to the West Indies, 21 February, 1800.’ On the opposite side is a further oval cartouche depicting Crow’s ship in battle with a French ship. Crow (1765–1829), was a privateer, slave trader and slave ship captain. He made thirteen slave ship voyages between 1790 and 1807, serving on seven as captain and mainly worked out of Liverpool. His memoirs, recounting his slave trading activities were published posthumously in 1830. The cup and cover represent an elaborate gift by Lloyd’s underwriters. The cover is waisted with a cast finial in the form of Neptune sitting on two dolphins above smooth acanthus chasing, with rope twist borders. The loop handles are formed as pairs of winged serpents, the rim cast and applied with a band of opposing dolphins enclosing bulrushes and at the base of the body is a band of smooth acanthus chasing. It has a waisted circular base with acanthus chasing and rope twist border. The maker’s mark is WF for William Frisbee and it was assayed in London.
Notes: For more information on Hugh Crow see the Underwriting Souls Exhibition “Lloyd’s and Slavery, Beyond Insurance and After Abolition”.