The islands have been inhabited for a long time and rose to prominence for their role in the
Atlantic slave trade. The
Kaloum or
Kalum dialect of the
Baga language was originally spoken on the island by a group of
Baga people. In 1755,
Miles Barber of the
African Company of Liverpool established a
trading post (then known as a
factory) there employing workers skilled in ship repair as well as
pilots for the local rivers. This led to Kassa being known as "Factory Island". English-language sources in the 18th century gave various corrupted names for the islands including "Isles of Loss", "the Edlesses", "The Idols", or "Las Idolas". In 1812
Samuel Samo, a Dutch slave trader, was seized by the British there and taken to
Freetown,
Sierra Leone, where he appeared before the
Vice Admiralty Court. He was the first person tried under the British
Slave Trade Felony Act 1811. (See for context the 1818
Anglo-Dutch Slave Trade Treaty which established
Mixed Commission Courts.)
British possession (1818–1904) Charles MacCarthy, the
Governor of Sierra Leone, signed a treaty with
Mangé Demba on 6 July 1818, whereby the islands were ceded to the
British Empire for the payment of an annual rent. McCarthy then asked
Peter Machlan, a surgeon with the
2nd West Indian Regiment to write an account of the islands and surrounding areas. This was published as
Travels into the Baga and Soosoo country during the year 1821. The islands were incorporated into
French Guinea, one of the constituent parts of
French West Africa, in July 1904. Scipio O'Connor was the first colonial administrator appointed by the French. == See also ==