Slavery After Abolition: Revolt on the Amelia
Posted4 months agoActive3 months ago
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The article 'Slavery After Abolition: Revolt on the Amelia' is discussed on HN, but its paywalled content sparks frustration and skepticism among commenters about the value of the article and the site's paywall model.
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- 01Story posted
Sep 17, 2025 at 1:39 AM EDT
4 months ago
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Sep 21, 2025 at 3:25 AM EDT
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10 comments in 96-108h
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Sep 22, 2025 at 6:06 AM EDT
3 months ago
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ID: 45272147Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 3:47:06 PM
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This is the first article I've seen on historytoday.com, and given the statistics it's likely I won't want to read another article from them until 2062. It doesn't look so interesting I want to pay $5 a month in perpetuity, or even go through the efforts of coming up with a username and password for the free trial. I don't even want to pirate it. I'd maybe pay $1 to read it, if I could do that with no strings attached.
Why quotes?
By the way this article is not just a rehash of wikipedia like most stuff. Somebody did research. I know because I have no money to subscribe and I thought surely it's all on wikipedia. But there is literally nothing about Amelia
Ironically there was an HMS Amelia that was first used to defend slavery and then used to uphold abolishment of the slave trade https://yarmouthmuseums.wordpress.com/2021/06/15/the-hms-ame...
Maybe. The seven sentences that are not paywall blocked didn't give any references and spent 1/4 of that talking about another more well-known ship.
Here is a blog post about the ship. It may or may not be better than the paywalled post.[0]
[0]https://yarmouthmuseums.wordpress.com/2021/06/15/the-hms-ame...
I know HN is fine with paywalled articles, but usually they're from major sites that at least some people have access to, and somebody is able to post a non-paywalled link.