An Act for the Abolition of Slavery throughout the British Colonies;
£5,000 · Offered by Maggs Bros Ltd
The 1807 Act for the Abolition of Slave Trade was the first major step towards the dismantling of a four-hundred-year-old system that simultaneously enriched and shamed the British Empire. As it allowed the practice of slavery to continue in the British colonies, a host of anti-slavery associations sprung up across the country advocating for abolition at a grass roots level. Indeed, Thomas Clarkson spent the next twenty-five years simultaneously trying to enforce the 1807 Abolition Act (the West Africa Squadron played no small part in this) while campaigning for abolition across the entire British Empire. In fact, the last time Clarkson and William Wilberforce appeared together was when the Anti-Slavery Society adopted a policy of immediate emancipation in 1830. “After the new Parliament began meeting in 1833, antislavery forces increased the pressure, organizing a rare street demonstration in which a large, orderly crowd marched to the Prime Minister’s office on Downing Street. Even the elderly Wilberforce, no fan of inflaming public opinion, was persuaded to publicly initiate a petition to Parliament … The debate lasted more than three months, making this session of Parliament one of the longest in memory .. The triumph came at last when the emancipation bill passed both houses of Parliament in the summer of 1833 (Hochschild). “ On 22 July 1833, the act passed the House of Commons on its second reading and received the Royal Assent on 28 August. This was the culmination of
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