The Channel Islands: Borderlands Migration in the Atlantic World, 1763-1815

The Channel Islands: Borderlands Migration in the Atlantic World, 1763-1815

History Hangout: Conversation with Sydney Watts

 

The Channel Islands lie between Britain and France, and historically occupied a space between Europe and the Americas within circuits of movement around the Atlantic world of the eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries. This position as a place in-between gave the Channel Islands special significance to migrants, refugees, smugglers, and pirates.  

In her latest book project, Dr. Sydney Watts, associate professor of history at the University of Richmond, uncovers the story of the Channel Islands as a locus of trade and migration. Her particular focus is on French refugees and migrants who left France during the Revolution and Napoleonic Wars for political and economic reasons. Among this group were the du Ponts, an aristocratic French family who fled an inhospitable environment in France in favor of entrepreneurial adventures in the new United States. Watts uses the du Pont family records held at the Hagley Library for her research. 

In support of her research, Dr. Watts received funding from the Hagley Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society.

The audio only version of this program is available on our podcast.