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Methods of the abolitionists

Meetings

The abolitionists used many ways to convince people that the slave trade should be abolished.

As the ideas of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade grew in popularity, a network of local abolition groups was established across Britain. These groups campaigned through public meetings and the publication of pamphlets and petitions.

Before the days of radio, television and the internet, public meetings were the best way to gain publicity for a cause. One of the main speakers at abolitionist meetings was John Newton, a former slave ship captain who became an abolitionist.

Evidence gathering

The Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade tasked Thomas Clarkson with gathering evidence of the evils of the slave trade.

In 1786, Thomas Clarkson鈥檚 'An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species' was published. Clarkson鈥檚 role was to collect as much damning evidence about the slave trade as possible.

He visited slave trading ports such as London, Bristol and Liverpool, where he boarded and investigated slave ships. He collected evidence such as iron handcuffs, branding irons and thumbscrews.

Thomas Clarkson addressing the Convention of the Anti-Slavery Society in London
Figure caption,
Thomas Clarkson addressing the Convention of the Anti-Slavery Society in London

In 1787 Thomas Clarkson went on a five month speaking tour of Britain, showing people chains and irons and a model of a slave ship. This was to stir up opposition to slavery.

He also spoke to over 20,000 seamen and found out that they too suffered from the slave trade, as their captains didn't care if they lived or died. Clarkson鈥檚 investigations angered some ships' captains and they tried to kill him by pushing him into the dock in Liverpool. They failed and Clarkson survived.

One of the most important pieces of evidence Clarkson gathered was a diagram of the Liverpool slave ship, the Brookes, showing the cramped conditions in which 450 enslaved people were stowed below decks.

Other campaigners also published leaflets describing conditions on the Middle Passage and atrocities such as the Zong incident 1781.

Establishment of legal rights

During the 1770s the abolitionist campaigner Granville Sharp campaigned against the slave trade through the law courts.

Granville Sharp won the Somersett legal case in London in 1772. Chief Justice Lord Mansfield (himself a slave owner) ruled that enslaved people in Britain could not be forced to return to the West Indies.

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