It was probably brought from Africa to America on the middle passage of a slave trading voyage. The voyages typically had three passages; the first to Africa, carrying goods, the second or middle from Africa to the American colonies carrying slaves, and the home passage carrying trade goods back. The drum today symbolizes the importance of music in African-America, both now and at the time of the slave trade. American colonists tried during the seventeenth century to enslave Native Americans but because of Native vulnerability to Old World diseases such as flu and smallpox, Africans were instead imported as slaves. In the eighteenth century African-American slaves sometimes escaped into coastal wetlands and occasionally intermarried with Native Americans. The United States today has a significant population of people descended from both Africans and Natives. The drum is made of wood (Cordia and Baphia varieties, both native to Africa), vegetable fibre and deer-skin. It was collected by a Reverend Mr Clerk on behalf of Sir Hans Sloane, founder of the British Museum. Sir Hans Sloane entered the drum in his catalogue as a 'drum made of a hollowed tree carved the top being brac'd wt. peggs & thongs wt. the bottom hollow from Virginia'. It is one of the earliest known surviving African-American objects.
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