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  1. The House of Slaves (Maison des Esclaves) and its Door of No Return is a museum and memorial to the victims of the Atlantic slave trade on Gorée Island, 3 km off the coast of the city of Dakar, Senegal.Its museum, which was opened in 1962 and curated until Boubacar Joseph Ndiaye's death in 2009, is said to memorialise the final exit point of the slaves from Africa.

  2. Dec 30, 2019 · The Door of No Return is located on the beach about three miles south of Ouidah. The Slave Route runs from the town to the Door of No Return, with various statues and monuments—some now faded or ...

  3. Goree Island is a small 45-acre island located off the coast of Senegal. Goree Island was developed as a center of the expanding European slave trade of Black African people, the Middle Passage. The first record of slave trading there dates back to 1536 and was conducted by the Portuguese, the first Europeans to set foot on the Island in 1444.

  4. Jul 16, 2018 · 06:48 - Source: CNN. Stories worth watching 16 videos. Stepping through Ghana's 'Door of No Return'. 06:48. Bride's sister springs into action when snake interrupts wedding party. 01:33. Hear ...

  5. Feb 26, 2021 · The castle overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, a former slave-trade outpost, is home to the so-called "Door of No Return," through which millions of Africans were forced onto slave ships bound for the United States.

  6. The Door of No Return is a memorial arch in Ouidah, Benin. The concrete and bronze arch, which stands on the beach, is a memorial to the enslaved Africans who were taken from the slave port of Ouidah to the Americas.

  7. Aug 31, 2022 · The Door of No Return was the exit point for slaves being forced into slave ships to the United States of America. It is located just beyond the female dungeons at...

  8. Jul 7, 2023 · Nearly 40 slave castles operated in Ghana alone. The slave traders brought in people from different African countries, but most of them spent their last moments on the continent in Ghana. The slave trade occurred in three distinct parts. The first involved enslaving people and holding them in slave castles until the boats arrived to take them away.

  9. Aug 9, 2007 · Pushed through the "door of no return", millions of Africans were shipped from places like this whitewashed fort in Elmina, Ghana, to a life of slavery in Brazil, the Caribbean and America. A...

  10. Feb 21, 2012 · The 'door-of-no-return' was the last step on African soil slaves would see, a wooden plank lead them from here to a slave ship. Gorée: An island preserving the past —

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