After West Indian slavery was abolished in 1833, the campaign turned to the wider world and the goal of Universal Emancipation. Veteran agitators Joseph Sturge, Lord Brougham and John Scoble launched the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society at a world convention in 1840.Throughout its long history the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was instrumental in framing Britain's diplomatic policy of promoting anti-slavery -- a policy that projected moral authority over allies and rivals, through naval power and international tribunals.The BFASS pushed for, and prepared the 1890 Brussels conference that divided Africa between the European powers, on the grounds of fighting Arab slavers. The Society was torn between its belief in the civilising mission of Europeans, and its brief to protect Africans. Rubber slavery in the Belgian Congo, indentured 'coolies' in the Empire, and forced labour in British Africa tested the Society's goals of civilising the world.This first comprehensive history of the Society draws on 120 years of anti-slavery publications, like the Anti-Slavery Reporter, to explain its unique status as the first international human rights organisation; and explains the Society's surprising attitudes to the Confederate secession, the 'Coolies', and the colonisation of Africa.
Explaining his actions later , Brooks said , “ I felt it my duty to relieve Butler and avenge the insult to my State . ... To punish an insulting inferior one used not a pistol or sword but a cane or horsewhip .
(III.) Of the Indictment againstTheodore Parker. I am indicted, gentlemen, for "resisting an officer" who was engaged in kidnapping Mr.Burns; and itis charged thatI, at Boston, May 26th, "with forceand armsdid knowinglyand wilfully, ...
The Trial of Theodore Parker for the "Misdemeanor" of a Speech in Faneuil Hall Against Kidnapping Before the Circuit Court...
55–68; David Birmingham, “The Coffee Barons of Cazengo,” Journal of African History, 19 (1978): 523–38; James Duffy, A Question of Slavery (Oxford, 1967) pp. 5–39; E. Gabriel to Russell, Feb. 25, 1860, FO 84/ 1 104. 25. Comm.
X I was taken from [my employer] Joseph C. Miller's . . . by two men . . . One came in and. . . seized me by the arm, and pulled me out of the house. Mrs. Miller called to her husband, who was in the front porch, and he ran out and ...
Thompson, George A Speech on British Colonial Slavery . . . delivered at the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Irwell Street, Salford. Manchester, 1832. Thompson, William An Inquiry into the Principles of the Distribution of Wealth most ...
8, 1860; Russell McClain, "The New York Express: Voice of Opposition" (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1955), 229-34; St. Clairsville [Ohio] Independent Republican, April 28, May 17, June 14 (quotation), 1860; Paul Hallerberg, ...
"A freed slave, Violet Bowman enjoys live in Boston.
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“284,000 Children Work in Hazardous Conditions on West Africa's Cocoa Farms,” Anti-Slavery International, http://www.antislavery.org/homepage/news/cocoare- port290702.htm ... P. M. [?Lavell], Cadbury Ltd. to J. Filkin, October 17, 2000.