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120 returned in a sloop sent from the factory to bring the prisoners to Senegal. The captain brought clothes for them, and gave them "an elegant entertainment, consisting of fowls, fresh meat, etc." On 29 December they were conveyed to the factory at Senegal, and were most kindly received by the French, and they remained there for a month all but a day; and then were sent in a French sloop to Gambia, on 28 January, 1743, which they reached on 31 January. Gambia was an English settlement, a fort, and a factory; and there also the poor fellows were kindly and hospitably entertained, provided with money and all they required. The time of their sufferings was now over. "The 1st February I went on board the Robert, Captain Dent, commander, lying in Gambia River. He was hir'd by the African Company and was laden with gum arabick, elephants' teeth, bees-wax, &c. I told him our case, and that I wanted to come to England; upon which he kindly promised me, or all of us, if we were so disposed, our passage to England gratis, provided we would work our way home. Captain Winter, however, had business to transact in Jamaica, and preferred to wait till a vessel would take him thither; two of the men remained at Gambia, and the rest, saying that they had no homes or friends in England, preferred to go to the West Indies and earn some money before they returned to the right and tight little island. "It was an unfortunate decision of Captain Winter. He and Larder sailed in a schooner bound for Jamaica, but never reached his destination, as the vessel was lost, and every one of the crew and passengers was drowned. "We set sail from Gambia the 3rd of February, 1743, and arrived in the river Thames on the 16th of April