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A Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade

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 Author: William Wilberforce  Category: Historical and Biographical Works  Published: 1789  Pages: 43  ISBN: 9781108024990  Tags: AdvocacyHistorical DocumentHuman RightsMoral AppealSlave Trade Abolition | More Details  Read Me!
 Description:

William Wilberforce passionately advocates for the abolition of the slave trade, combining moral arguments, facts, and fervent appeals to humanity’s conscience.


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Goodreads.com Abstract

William Wilberforce (1759 1833) was a politician, philanthropist and evangelical Christian, now best known for his work to end the slave trade. Elected to Parliament in 1780, he campaigned unsuccessfully for penal and electoral reform. In 1787, at the encouragement of William Pitt, he took up the cause of abolition at Westminster, but humanitarian and ethical arguments were slow to overcome the economic interests of those who had made fortunes from the slave trade or the use of slave labour. It was not until 1807 that the Abolition Bill was finally passed: shortly beforehand, Wilberforce had published this Letter to his constituents, justifying his preoccupation with abolition against claims that he was neglecting their local interests at Westminster, and setting out all his arguments against the slave trade. It is followed by his 1814 letter to Talleyrand, calling for a Europe-wide ban of the trade."


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