The Crown's Silence by Brooke N. Newman audiobook

The Crown's Silence: The Hidden History of the British Monarchy and Slavery in the Americas

By Brooke N. Newman
Read by Allyson Johnson

HarperAudio

Unabridged

Format : Retail CD (In Stock)
  • $55.99
    Available on 01/27/2026

    ISBN: 9798228688117

  • $76.99
    Available on 01/27/2026

    ISBN: 9798228688100

  • $45.95
    Available on 01/27/2026

    ISBN: 9798228688124

Category: Nonfiction/History
Audience: Adult
Language: English

Summary

Summary

For readers of Annette Gordon-Reed and Nikole Hannah-Jones, the shocking untold story of the British royal family’s centuries-long investment in slavery and continued profiting off its legacy—from Elizabeth I to the present—and the monarchy’s culpability in the racial injustice that gave birth to the United States.  

For centuries, Britain has told itself and the world that it is an abolitionist nation, one that, unlike the United States, rejected human bondage and dismantled its Atlantic slave empire without tearing itself apart in violence. An abolitionist nation headed by a just, humane monarch who liberated enslaved Africans and recognized their descendants as free and equal subjects of the British Crown. As Prince William put it recently, “We’re very much not a racist family.” When slaveholding nations write their collective history, the enslavers hold the pen.

Now, acclaimed historian Brooke Newman reveals the true story: the enslavers were supported by members of the royal family. From the 1560s to 1807, the British monarchy invested in the transatlantic slave trade and built a slave empire in colonial America and the Caribbean, with the labor of millions of enslaved Africans who would see none of its riches. It profited from African slave trading and hereditary bondage, setting the stage for other colonial powers to develop brutal slave systems that remained legal long after full emancipation in the British Empire in 1838. The scars of this history remain visible the world over, from economic inequality and educational and health disparities to racial discrimination and prejudice. Still, Crown officials continue to insist the legacies of slavery “belong to the past.” 

Newman focuses not on portraits of British monarchs but on their actions and investments that led to the rise and fall of the transatlantic slave trade and colonial slavery, and on some of the people whose lives it took, placing the struggles and sacrifices of innumerable individuals of African origin and ancestry at the center of Britain’s story.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“Every monarch acted shamefully, and the author herself discovers disgraceful racism in the traditional heroes of abolition…An account of powerful people behaving badly that’s hard to resist. Kirkus Reviews

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Author

Author Bio: Brooke N. Newman

Author Bio: Brooke N. Newman

Brooke N. Newman is an award-winning historian at Virginia Commonwealth University and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Her previous book, A Dark Inheritance: Blood, Race, and Sex in Colonial Jamaica, was a finalist for the Frederick Douglass Book Prize. She has received fellowships from MacDowell, the American Philosophical Society, the Eccles Centre at the British Library, the Gilder Lehrman Center, and many others. Her essays have appeared in Slate, the Washington PostThe Guardian, and others, and her research has been featured in such outlets as the BBC, NPR, Vox, and Smithsonian Magazine.

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Details

Details

Available Formats : Retail CD, Library CD, MP3 CD
Category: Nonfiction/History
Audience: Adult
Language: English