This article's factual accuracy is disputed. (December 2017) |
Thomas Clarkson (1760–1846), the pioneering English abolitionist, prepared a "map" of the "streams" of "forerunners and coadjutors" of the abolitionist movement, which he published in his work, The History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-Trade by the British Parliament published in 1808.[1] The map shows streams with various branches that led to the late-eighteenth-century movement that convinced the British Parliament to ban the slave trade. The list below is taken from Clarkson's map.
No women appear to be on the list other than Elizabeth I, although many in fact were involved in the movement including Hannah More, Joanna Baillie, and Anna Laetitia Barbauld. James Oglethorpe does not appear on the list, even though he and other Georgia Trustees prohibited slavery in the Province of Georgia. Oglethorpe later collaborated in opposing the slave trade with Granville Sharp, whom Clarkson describes as "the father of the cause in England". Slavery as both a moral and legal concern arose in the early days of the Georgia Colony, which prohibited slavery in 1735 and was challenged by neighbouring South Carolina, a slaveholding society.[2][3]
Many others who warrant mention may not be acknowledged in Clarkson's list. A section is provided below for the addition of other forerunners.
Clarkson's list
editList of "forerunners and coajutors" on map:
Various forerunners to 1787
edit- Cardinal Ximenes
- Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
- Elizabeth I
- Pope Leo X
- Louis XIII
- Hill (Hill's Naval History)
- Richard Baxter
- Morgan Godwyn
- Southern (poet)
- Thomas Tryon
- Richard Steele
- Dr. Primatt
- Montesquieu
- Alexander Pope
- James Thomson
- Francis Hutcheson
- John Atkins
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Richard Savage
- Foster
- Griffith Hughes
- Wallis
- Bishop Hayter
- William Shenstone
- John Dyer
- Edmund Burke
- Adam Smith
- Malachi Postlethwaite (not known if this is Malachy Postlethwayt, a defender of African trade)
- Laurence Sterne
- Thomas Jeffery
- William Warburton
- Granville Sharp
- James Beattie
- John Bicknell (Bickness?)
- Thomas
- John Wesley
- David Hartley
- Sir George Saville
- Abbe Liévin-Bonaventure Proyart
- Millan
- Robertson
- Guillaume Thomas François Raynal
- Dr. William Paley
- Thomas Day
- Bishop Porteus
- G. Wakefield
- William Cowper
- Dr. Gregory
- James Ramsay
- Jacques Necker
- John Chubb and George White (Bridgewater Petition, 1785)
- James Currie
- Captain J. S. Smith
- William Roscoe
- Edward Rushton
Early Quakers in England
editQuakers and/or abolitionists in America from 1688
edit- David Cooper
- John Blunston
- William Burling
- Ralph Sandiford
- Benjamin Lay
- John Woolman
- Quakers of New England, New York, Maryland (mid-1700s)
- Anthony Benezet
- William Dillwyn
- Quakers of Virginia, Carolina, and Georgia:
- Warner Mifflin
- James Pemberton
- George Whitefield
- Judge Sewel (Sewall)
- Benjamin Rush
- Winchester
Various Quakers and/or abolitionists in England and America
edit- Benjamin Franklin
- Thomas Jefferson
- John Jay
- William Dillwyn
- Joseph Woods (Sr.)
- Samuel Hoare Jr
- George Harrison
- Dr. Thomas Knowles
- John Lloyd
- David Barclay
- James Phillips
- Joseph Gurney Bevan
- Joseph Hancock, a Wisbech Quaker (helped Clarkson find a publisher for his essay "Is it right to make slaves of others against their will?")
Others, up to 1787
edit- Dr. Peckard
- Thomas Clarkson
- Bennet Langton
- Lord Scarsdale
- Dr. Baker
- Richard Phillips
- Sheldon
- Sir Charles Middleton
- Sir Herbert Mackworth
- William Wilberforce
- John Villiers
- Powys (Lord Lilford) (possibly 1st baron)
- Sir Richard Hill (possibly 2nd Baronet)
- Lord Balgonie (Leven)
- L. Hawkins Browne
Abolition forerunners not listed on the Clarkson map
editMany of the London salons and circles of the 1770s and later took up the cause of antislavery, at least intellectually, thus paving the way for later action. Examples include Johnson's Circle, the Blue Stocking Society, and James Oglethorpe's associates.[4][5]
References
edit- ^ Clarkson, Thomas. The history of the rise, progress, and accomplishment of the abolition of the African slave-trade by the British Parliament. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
- ^ Wilson, Thomas D. The Oglethorpe Plan: Enlightenment Design in Savannah and Beyond. Charlottesville, Va.: University of Virginia Press, 2012. See Epilogue.
- ^ Ettinger, Amos A. James Edward Oglethorpe: Imperial Idealist. Oxford, UK: Clarendon, 1936. Chapter IX.
- ^ Eger, Elizabeth. Bluestockings: Women of Reason from Enlightenment to Romanticism. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.
- ^ Wilson, Thomas D. The Oglethorpe Plan: Enlightenment Design in Savannah and Beyond. Charlottesville, Va.: University of Virginia Press, 2012, Epilogue.
External links
edit- Thomas Clarkson “map” https://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/emancipation/TCAbolMap/clarkson.html