Britons of African Descent until the
Abolition of Slavery:
1677 Though persons of color had been enslaved for some
time, a court first ruled in 1677 that black persons could
be considered in a list of merchandise (that is, that
slavery was legally permissible in Britain).
1706 Another ruling declared black persons free on
English soil.
1729 English Law Office ruled that a person enslaved
elsewhere did not necessarily gain freedom when brought to
Great Britain.
1700s Bristol, Liverpool and London became centers of the
slave trade, trafficking in millions of Africans. Slave
interests financed a powerful West Indian lobby in
Parliament. Slaves continued to be advertised for sale until
the last quarter of the century. Most free blacks worked as
servants. They gathered in clubs, churches and other meeting
places, and banded together to help slaves escape their
masters. A 1772 account mentions "black hops," dances to
African popular music, and British-Africans were often
employed as military musicians.
1765 Granville Sharp began a series of legal battles to
defend rights of Africans to be free of seizure, effectively
beginning the abolitionist movement in Britain. His A
Representation of the Injustice and Dangerous Tendency of
Tolerating Slavery appeared in 1769.
1770 Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, born in Nigeria and abducted at
the age of 15, published the first memoir by a
African-Briton, Narrative of the Most remarkable
Particulars in the Life of . . . an African Prince.
1772 In the Somerset case, Lord Mansfield ruled that
slaves could not be exported from Britain against their
will. Owners sometimes defied the law, however, capturing
escaped slaves and forcing them on ship.
1773 Phillis Wheatley's Poems on Various Subjects
was published in London.
1772 Ignatius Sancho's urbane Letters attracted wide
circulation. He commented on the pervasive racism he
encountered.
1778 A Scottish court ruled that slavery was illegal in
Scotland.
1781 The Zong case aroused sympathy; slavers who had
thrown 133 slaves into the ocean in order to collect
insurance sued when refused payment. Granville Sharp and
others brought suit against them but the case seems to have
been dropped.
1787 Ottobah Cugoano, kidnapped from Ghana and freed in
England, published the first abolitionist treatise by a
Briton of color, Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil and
Wicked Traffic of the Slavery and Commerce of the Human
Species.
1788 Dolben Act passed, first modest regulation of slave
trade.
1789 Olaudah Equiano (1745-97), the eloquent
African-descended spokesperson for the abolitionist cause,
published The Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano.
1790s The enslavement of African-Britons had in practice
almost ceased, largely because slaves succeeded in escaping
their would-be masters.
1791 William Wilberforce introduced the first
Parliamentary motion to abolish the slave trade in Britain
and its possessions.
1796 English court refused to give damages to slave
merchant seeking compensation for 128 Africans who had
starved to death on a sea voyage, thus ruling that slaves
could not be viewed simply as merchandise.
1800 Estimates of numbers of Britons of color vary from
10,000 to 20,000 (pop. of England and Wales was 9,000,000 ).
1807 Slave trading by British subjects and in British
possessions declared illegal.
1824 Robert Wedderburn's The Horrors of Slavery
published.
1827 Grace Jones, an Antiguan slave brought to England,
sued for freedom and lost, though British public opinion was
divided on the case.
1832 Reform Bill extended franchise to prosperous
upper-middle class Britons.
1833 Slavery abolished in British possessions (though
certain exceptions delayed the process of
implementation).