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Emancipation Of Slavery
Caribbean History School Based Assessment
Candidate Name: Martin RobinsonSubject: Caribbean HistoryName of School: Eltham High SchoolCentre #:Candidate #:Territory: JamaicaTeacher’s Name: Mrs. DoctorYear of Examination: 2016
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AcknowledgementFirst of all I would like to thank god for giving me the strength and helping me to obtain the
information I need to complete this S.B.A. Also, I would like to thank my parent for helping me
to put in the hard work into this assignment. Secondly I would like to thank my fellow
schoolmates for encouraging me to do this at the best of my ability and sitting with me each day
to ensure that I complete my S.B.A correctly. Last, I would also like to thank my teacher for
giving me the opportunity to select this topic which I have learnt many a lot during my research.
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Table of Content
THEME/QUESTION…………..……………………………………………………………….…1
RATIONALE……………………………………………………………..………………………….1
PRESSURE GROUPS………………………………………………….........……………………2
HUMANITARIANS/ABOLITIONIST……….……………………...….…………..…..…..4
ARGUMENTS TO SUPPORT/AGAINST SLAVERY…………….………….…....……6
ABOLITION MOVEMENT IN THE BRITISH WEST INDIES 1769-1832…..17
FINAL STEPS ABOLITION…………………………………….…….……..…………….…..11
AMELIORATION………………………………………………………………………………….12
THE EMANCIPATION ACT 1833……………………………………….……………...…..13
THE APPRENTICESHIP SYSTEM…………………………………….……………...…….16
CONCLUSION……………………………………………..………………….……………………18
BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………....………..19
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THEME“The Emancipation of Slavery”
QUESTIONCan it be proven that as a result of the influence of the pressure groups and abolitionists/humanitarians’ slavery was abolished?
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RATIONAleThe reason the researcher chose this topic is because of his curiosity towards finding out if the
Pressured groups and humanitarians are really the ones who brought an end to slavery. Even
though the maroons were the first set of freed slaves they weren’t the ones who brought an end to
slavery. The pressured groups and humanitarians helped with the emancipation of the slave trade
but this assignment is to conclude if they are the ones who brought a complete end to the
abolition of slavery.
It was said by Dr. Eric Williams “it challenges one-hundred years of British imperial
historiography by making the controversial argument that the causes of abolition and
emancipation were economic, not humanitarian.” According to CXC History Workbook chapter
5, for over three hundred years vested interests kept both slavery and the slave trade going
regardless of the evils entailed. In the course of the 18th Century, however, Christians in Europe
became increasingly conscious of all the evils which arose from slavery and the slave trade.
Some became convinced that it was their Christians duty to set the Negros slaves free.
Slaves had a passionate desire for freedom but did the humanitarians and pressure groups fetch
it for them? This is the main question the researcher is curious towards finding out but this
question will be answered in this assignment. Therefore I will expound on what are Pressured
groups and humanitarians, also to enhance your knowledge about the emancipation of slavery.
As you read along you will ascertain whether the pressure groups and humanitarians brought
emancipation to slavery.
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PRESSURED GROUPSDefine Pressured groups - Pressured groups are groups that influenced the freedom of the enslaved.
THE BEGINNING OF PRESSURE GROUPS IN THE CARIBBEANIn the 17th - 18th century a number of groups were formed which supported the emancipation of
slavery. They were known as Pressured groups, most of them were religious in nature these
included:
Quakers
According to Brian Dyde, Robert Greenwood and Shirley Hamber, the Quakers acted as a
pressure group in the movement for the abolition of slavery. Until 1755 Quakers could legally
own slaves, but it was against the principle of many to do so. In 1755 they were forbidden to do
so by rules of their society, and they were required to use all of the force to bring about abolition.
The Clapham Sect, or ‘The Saints’
The Church of England was the established church of Britain and her colonies. In Britain it was
associated with the landowning gentry and the Tory party, and in the West Indies it was the
church of the planters. In both Britain and the West Indies, it kept aloof from the abolition
movement.
In the 18th century an evangelical movement grew up within the Church of England. The
members wanted less emphasis on salvation through good works and morality. One group in this
movement known as ‘The Clapham sect’, or ‘The Saint’, because they worshipped at the church
of the Reverend John Venn in Clapham in south London between 1792 and 1813. Among them
were William Wilberforce, Granville Sharp, Thomas Clarkson, James Ramsay, James Stephen
and Zachary Macaulay, all famous names in abolition. Three of these men had considerable first-
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hand experience of the evils of slavery. Ramsay had been a clergyman in St. Kitts for nineteen
years, Stephen a lawyer in St. Kitts for ten years and Zachary Macaulay the under-manager on a
Jamaican sugar estate for four years. They gave practical, supporting evidence to the other
members of the sect, especially those in Parliament, who had considerable influence in public
affairs. In Parliament the contribution of the Saints to abolition was great, and they
complemented the Quakers who had done so much to arouse public opinion in the same cause.
Another group was the industrialist but they were not really seen as pressure group because they
did not necessarily want slavery to end but they wanted their crops to be sold. They didn’t want
slavery to end because they saw it as inhumane.
Non-Conformist Missionaries
According to Nadine C. Atkinson, the Christian denominations which broke away from the
Anglican Church’s mode and methods of worship were known as Non-Conformist Missionaries.
They included the Baptists, Wesleyans, Quakers, Presbyterians and Methodists. By 1831 several
denominations were working in the British West Indies. They all came to the West Indies as
missionaries seeking to bring the gospel to the slave populations. They faced great persecution
by th planters who recognized that their message of equality and brotherly love was essentially
undermining the slave society and the basis of slavery.
Humanitarians/abolitionists3
Emancipation Of Slavery
ABOLITIONISTS- According to The Caribbean History Pocket Encyclopedia (by Nadine C.
Atkinson) abolitionists is a varied group of agitators who fought for the abolition of the slave
trade and later on the abolition of slavery. They were also called the Anti-Slavery Society.
Humanitarians are health inspectors who were similar to Pressured groups. These humanitarians
include Granville Sharp, James Ramsay, James Stephen, Zachary Macaulay, Thomas fowell
Clarkson, William Wilberforce and Thomas Buxton. They believed that slavery was morally
wrong and that the enslaved were to be treated as human beings. Even though the Humanitarians
and pressured groups were fighting to bring an end to slavery persons were also fighting against
them. There was one group in particular who brought competition to them, this group was ‘The
West India Interest’, the strength of the movement against slavery took them suddenly by
surprise. As late as 1783, they were chiefly concerned with the resumption of trade between with
the West Indian colonies and the newly independent United States, and won concessions from
the government to partially reopen this trade. In the same year Lord North, the ex-Prime-
Minister, said “it would be impossible to abolish the slave trade for it was a trade which had in
some measure become necessary to every nation in Europe”. When the West India Interest
realized the threat presented by the abolitionist and the pressured groups they made slavery their
chief concern and managed to defer abolition until 107. They began with a campaign of serious
counter-propaganda in 1792. Its members organized their own opposition in Parliament and
printed their own pamphlets for circulation. They found it difficult to attack Wilberforce, as he
was such a respected figure, and concentrate their attack on people like Reverend James Ramsay
who had just published an essay on ‘The Treatment and Conversion of African Slavery in the
Sugar Colonies’. They spread tales, accusing Ramsay of depravity in St. Kitts, and poured scorn
on his part in the abolitionist campaign. By the beginning of the 19th century, though, they
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realized that the battle was lost in the House of Commons. After that they relied on the House of
Lords to delay the inevitable for as long as possible. (By Dyde, Greenwood, Hamber 2003)
A motif of the British anti-slavery society
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ARGUMENTS TO SUPPORT SLAVERY The Europeans taught that the Africans weren’t ready for socialization.
They taught that blacks were inferior and whites were superior.
Whites saw themselves as superior (wealthy).
ARGUMENTS AGAINST SLAVERY
The humanitarians taught that slavery was morally wrong.
Slavery was inhumane and everyone was equal.
Every man/woman was born free.
Slavery led to a Mona culture society which was dangerous to the economy.
The profits of plantation owners were not reinvested in the local economy but spent
abroad.
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THE ABOLITION MOVEMENT IN THE BRITISH WEST INDIES 1769-1832
The abolition movement began during the period of the 17th century in the British West Indies. In
1769 it was calculated that there were about 15,000 slaves living in Britain valued at around
700,000 pounds. These slaves were brought to Britain by their masters from the Caribbean. One
such slave was a Jamaican known as James Somerset. His master was Charles Stewart.
Somerset had been ill-treated by his master. When he had recovered, his master claimed him
back. So in 1771 Granville Sharp took Somerset’s case to court. The case was heard by Lord
Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice of England. On June 22, 1772 the Mansfield Judgment was
handed down. It stated that slavery was illegal in Britain. All slaves living in Britain were freed
with immediate effect. This victory motivated Granville Sharp and the other abolitionists to press
for abolition throughout the British Caribbean, but this was too big a step. They decided to end
the slave trade instead. Then in 1787 the Society for Effecting the Abolitionist of the Slave
Trade was formed. It included Quakers but its main members were Humanitarians such as
Granville Sharp, Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce who was a member of the British
Parliament. Wilberforce was outspoken and he encouraged other members of parliament to
support the abolition of the slave trade. However the West India Interest opposed Wilberforce.
Clarkson provided Wilberforce with evidence of the evils of the Atlantic Slave Trade and
Wilberforce used these evidences to argue his case in parliament. Thomas Clarkson was referred
to as “the eyes and ears” of Wilberforce. Petitions from the British public were also sent to
parliament supporting the ending of the slave trade. The British government passed the act to
abolish the slave trade in 1807. This meant that no more slaves were to be brought to the
Caribbean from the West Africa. Despite this slave traders still continued to smuggle slaves
illegally into the British Caribbean. After the slave trade was ‘abolished’ the humanitarians
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turned their attention to the question of slavery. So in 1823 the Society for Gradually Abolition
of Slavery was formed. Its main aim was to introduce amelioration for slaves and eventually
abolition. The society sent 750 petitions to parliament. Thomas Buxton was the chief
parliamentary spokesman on slavery. He introduced the resolution in parliament that the slaves
were to be ameliorated and that slavery “ought to be abolished throughout the British Colonies.”
This resolution became an “eye opener” for the West Indies Lobby because the now realized that
the Anti-Slavery Society was determined to abolish slavery. The West Indies Lobby was
determined to forestall or undermine the activities of the Anti-Slavery Society in order to prevent
the abolition of slavery. As a result they formed a committee and drafted their own proposals.
Some of these included:
Female slaves should not be flogged.
Slave marriages were to be encouraged.
Slaves should be given Saturdays to go to the market and Sundays to go to church.
Slaves should be allowed to give evidence in court if a minister would give the slave a
character reference.
Records of all floggings of over three lashes should be presented to the magistrates at the
quarter sessions.
Slave families should not be divided.
Slaves should not be sold in payment of debts.
Adequate religious instruction should be given to slaves.
Saving banks for slaves should be set up to encourage thrift and enable slaves to buy
personal possessions.
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Buxton withdrew his resolution and the proposals were passed and sent to the colonies.
Many of the planters rejected the proposals and refused to publish them. This resulted in The
Demerara Revolt as the slaves believed that their freedom had come from Britain, but it was
being withheld by the planters. The London missionary John Smith was accused by the planters
of knowing about the revolt and failing to tell the relevant authorities.
He was arrested and died in prison. Chapels were destroyed by planters. The refusal of the
planters to ameliorate their slaves and the harsh treatment of the missionaries sent a message to
the Anti-Slavery Society and the British public that emancipation was inevitable. Their actions
only motivated the humanitarians to work harder to accomplish emancipation.
In 1830 the Agency Committee was formed by the Quaker brother Joseph and Emmanuel
Cooper. Its aim was to win support for emancipation from the British Public. They had set up
over 1,000 new anti-slavery groups, they carried out house-to-house lobbying, they launched a
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poster campaign highlighting the need for abolition, they used the press, the pulpit, printed
pamphlets and gathered hundreds of petitions with large numbers of signatures to be sent to
parliament.
In 1831 the occurrence of Sam Sharpe Rebellion in Jamaica played a major role in the
abolition movement. It was planned as a strike but turned into a revolt. Hundreds of slavers
including Sam Sharpe were hung. Churches were burnt by planters, and William Knibb and
Thomas Burchell (Baptist missionaries) were accused of encouraging the slaves to revolt. They
were brought to trial on charges that were false. The violent response of the planters to the
enslaved and the missionaries contributed to the decision to bring slavery to an end.
On January 26 1832, a number of planters sponsored the formation of a terrorist
organization in St. Ann’s Bay known as the Colonial Church Union. It was an anti-missionary
organization which was aimed at persecuting missionaries to destroyed 16 churches and attacked
missionaries. After their release, William Knibb and Thomas Burchell returned to Britain to join
the Anti-Slavery Society, and to report the atrocities carried out by the Colonial Church Union as
well as the harsh treatment given out to the slaves by the planters. These reports sparked an
uproar in the British public and renewed the efforts of the humanitarians to bring an end to
slavery. The Parliamentary Reform Act was also passed in Britain. The act led to the
redistribution of the electoral divisions, gave more people the vote and increased parliamentary
representation of the new industrial towns. As a result of this, the West India Lobby’s strength in
parliament was reduced considerably. The Anti-Slavery Society encouraged the new voters and
the election candidates to support emancipation. When elections were held in 1833, the
successful candidates who included industrialists and manufacturers were prepared to support
emancipation and voted in favour of it. (By Dyde,Greenwood, Hamber 2003)
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FINAL STEPS TO ABOLITION
The abolitionist movement was helped by the death of Pitt in 1806. The new Prime Minister was
Charles James Fox who was a keen supporter of abolition. In the spring of 1807 the English
Parliament passed the Abolition act. The slave Trade was to end on 1 January 1808. British
warships were sent to hunt down captains who ignored the law. They also stopped the ships of
any nation at war with England and freed their slave cargo. Several nations followed the British
example and passed laws against the trade: the United States 1808, Holland in 1814, France in
1818 and Spain in 1820. However, the Spanish and United States government took no really
serious action to stop the trade until the middle of the 19th century. Each year thousands of
Africans were still carried to the southern states of the United States, to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and
Brazil. A small proportion was freed by the British naval patrol sent to stop and search the ships
suspected of carrying slaves. Up to 1834 most of the Africans they liberated were taken to Sierra
Leone to join slaves freed in England after Lord Mansfield’s judgement. ( By William Claypole,
John Robottom 2001)
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AMELIORATION proposalsAmelioration – means to make something better.
Faced with such a strong anti-slavery movement, the West India Committee tried to head off the
attacks. They told the Colonial Secretary that they would support some proposals for improving
the conditions of slaves. The Foreign Minister, George Canning, raised these ‘Amelioration
Proposals’ made between 1815 and in parliament in March 1823, and promised that his
government would, sometime in the future, ask parliament to agree to emancipation. With this
promise the Humanitarians/Pressured groups supported the amelioration proposals which were
agreed in May 1823. The proposals said that the government should write to each of the colonial
governors suggesting that the assemblies should pass local laws for improving slavery conditions
which took effect in 1873. (By William Claypole, John Robottom 2001)
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THE FAILURE OF AMELIORATION
The proposals met with fierce resistance in the colonies. In the crown colonies the governors
were ordered to carry them out but there was a refusal which also influenced The Demerara
Revolt. In Trinidad the planters asked for them to be withdrawn immediately. The assemblies on
the older islands greeted the proposal with outbursts of anger. They ignored the warnings from
the West India Committee that the only way to stop the anti-slavery movement in Britain was ‘by
doing of ourselves, all that is right to be done – and doing it speedily and effectively’. In
Dominica the planters talked about independence; in Jamaica the assembly discussed joining the
United States; in Barbados the assembly said that their slaves laws where already ‘a catalogue of
indulgencies to the Blacks’. In the end most of the assemblies passed only a few of the least
amelioration proposals. The amelioration proposal failed, but there were an important land mark
in the struggle for emancipation. The British government had promised that the emancipation
would come one day. The refusal of the planters to accept emancipation meant that the anti-
slavery campaign was given a stronger case. It split the West India interest between those in
England who had tried to delay emancipation by amelioration and those in the Caribbean who
clung desperately to a passing way of life. (By William Claypole, John Robottom 2001)
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The ABOLITION/emancipation act, July 1833
The Emancipation Bill was introduced by Thomas Buxton in 1833. Its former champion,
Wilberforce, was approaching his death. By the time he died on 29 July 1833 he was assured that
emancipation would go through, as it had already passed its second reading. The Act stated that:
‘Slavery shall be and is hereby utterly and forever abolished and declared unlawful throughout
the British colonies and possessions abroad.’ However, in 1833 emancipation was not as
complete as these words would suggest, because there were clauses in the Act about an
apprenticeship system which delayed complete emancipation until 1838.
According to Nadine C. Atkinson the Bill originally proposed a loan of E20,000,000 to slaves-
owners from the British government for “compensation for loss of labour force,” and an
apprenticeship period of twelve years for ex-slaves. Political and humanitarian factors also
contributed. Slavery was abolished in 1848 in the French West Indies, in 1886 in Cuba 1888 in
Brazil. This meant that most slaves in 1833 were likely to die in slavery.
These two clauses were amended and the final Act was basically as follows:
Slave children under six years old were to be freed immediately.
Slaves over six would have to serve an apprenticeship of six years in the case of field slaves, and
four years in the case of all others.
Apprentices should work for not more than forty-five (45) hours per week without pay, and any
additional hours with pay.
Apprentices should be provided with food and clothing by the master.
Compensation in the form of a free gift of E20,000,000 should be paid to slave-owners
throughout the British empire on condition that the local legislatures passed laws to bring
emancipation.
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The apprenticeship period could be shortened, but no alternative to apprenticeship would be
allowed.
On the August 29, 1833 the Act received Royal Assent. Emancipation was to come into effect
on 1 August 1834. Orders-in-Council enforced it on the Crown colonies. In the other colonies,
the local legislatures were expected to follow suit, and since they wanted their compensation,
they enacted emancipation laws quickly. The Jamaican planters had been very worried when
they first heard that compensation was to be in the form of a loan, but after this was changed to a
free gift by the persuasive efforts of the West India Committee and the amount increased, they
too, passed emancipation quickly. The legislatures of Antigua and Bermuda decided to do
without apprenticeship, so there the slaves had complete freedom on 1 August 1834. The other
islands accepted apprenticeship, though it seemed hard for the slaves of St. Kitts, Nevis and
Monserrat when their neighbours in Antigua were free. Complete freedom for all was scheduled
for 1 August 1840, but in the event it was brought forward to 1 August 1838, when it decided to
end the apprenticeship two years early. (By Dyde, Greenwood, Hamber 2003)
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THE APPRENTICESHIP SYSTEMThe Apprenticeship System began in 1834 after slavery ended. It was made to soften the blow of
emancipation. Humanitarians had accepted that the apprenticeship was justified on the grounds
that the ex-slaves would need time to adjust to looking after themselves, handling money and
supporting their families. However it was soon apparent that the apprenticeship system was not
designed to do this because food and clothes were still provided by the masters, and the slaves’
opportunity for earning money was very limited. The apprenticeship was to run from 1834-1840
which meant that it was to be a 6year period but in 1838 the British Parliament amended the
Abolition of Slavery Act by forbidding the flogging of females or punishment on the treadmill,
and by allowing the colonial governors to supervise the treatment of apprentices in workhouses.
In spite of their loss of slaves owners were still willing to keep apprenticeship. In 1836 a Quaker
humanitarian Joseph Storge, visited Jamaica and reported on the apprenticeship system on its
cruelty especially in the work house and even accused the special magistrates/stipendiary (retired
navy officers who were sent to make sure the system was not abused by owners) of corruption.
So because the apprenticeship was judged a failure, it ended 1838 instead of 1840 hence slaves
in Britain were officially freed, the abolition movement then took toile in Caribbean countries
such as the Spanish and French West Indies. (By William Claypole John Robottom 2001)
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August 1, 1834
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ConclusionIt has been concluded that the pressured group did not remain very long during the period of the
abolition movement. They evanesce away during the 1830s hence they weren’t the ones to
abolish slavery they only helped with the abolition. On the 1 of August 1834 slaves were granted
their freedom by the help of others. However, neither the pressured groups nor the humanitarians
brought an end to slavery completely but they are the main reasons why freedom was granted on
August 1, 1834 to slaves. But for sure it has been proven that the Humanitarians and pressured
groups are the ones who brought a complete end to slavery in England because they fought for
what they taught was morally right. They also incited the other Caribbean countries such as the
French and Spanish West Indies to begin their abolition movement to emancipate slaves across
the world.
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BIBLIOGRAPHYCaribbean Story Book 1 William Claypole, John Robottom
Longman 2001
Emancipation to Emigration Bryan Dyde, Robert Greenwood, Shirley Hamber
Macmillan Caribbean 2003
Capitalism & Slavery 2005 Eric Williams, with a new introduction by Colina Palmer
The Caribbean History Pocket
Encyclopedia 2003 Nadine C. Atkinson
CXC History Workbook 1980 Elizabeth M. Halcrow
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