'', showing how slaves were shackled on board|248x248px Davenport was one of the world's most prolific traders in enslaved people, and by the number of ships disembarked, the single most prolific slave trader from the
Port of Liverpool. He took part in 163 slaving voyages and his
slave ships carried almost 40,000 enslaved Africans. Davenport opened new markets; he sold enslaved people in
Tobago,
St. Vincent,
Grenada and
Dominica, islands that were ceded to the British from the French in 1763. He took many of his captives from Old Calabar, Gabon and Cameroon, much further eastwards along the African coast than his contemporaries. He pioneered the Liverpool to
Old Calabar route. He took almost three quarters of all enslaved people from Cameroon and he participated in the
Chesapeake slave trade, transporting enslaved people to North America.
Retirement Davenport was a lifelong bachelor; most Liverpool slave traders used marriage to cement commercial ties with other slave trading families in the city. He shunned not only public life but also the slave trade associations attended by other slavers. He retired in mid-1786 at the same time that pamphlets began circulating in the city demonstrating the evil of the industry. Davenport did not state why he chose to retire at that time; however, he was aware of the growing
campaign for abolition because his younger brother, Thomas Davenport, had been a lawyer in the
Zong massacre court cases. Radburn speculates that Davenport wanted to avoid wider public scrutiny and the slurs against his character that remaining a slave trader would have entailed. ==Archives of William Davenport==