The 18th Century Enslaving Industry: Lancaster Quakers involvement

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Bol This book uncovers a little-known history of Quakers in Britain and demonstrates how the activities of a group of Lancaster Quaker Merchants involved in slavery fitted the accepted social, political and moral attitudes of 17th and18th century Britain towards the enslavement of Africans. It suggests that the single heroic narrative of British Quakers being abolitionists masks the truth that some British Quakers were heavily involved in all aspects of the enslaving industry and that despite Quakers centrally opposing enslaving they were not formally challenged or disowned.The use of family histories to follow the fortunes of these men whilst providing an insight into the early Quaker movement explains how the money generated by enslaving Africans came back into British society to finance infrastructure projects such as canals, turnpikes and country houses, to establish banks and cotton mills supporting the development of the industrial revolution, to provide community welfare projects and enhanced social status for the families. These families present a picture of what was happening to many of the families of the 10,000 people in Britain who invested in the enslaving industry. Their money made a major contribution to building the society in which we live and from which we benefit today at the expense of the labour and lives of past enslaved Africans.

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This book uncovers a little-known history of Quakers in Britain and demonstrates how the activities of a group of Lancaster Quaker Merchants involved in slavery fitted the accepted social, political and moral attitudes of 17th and18th century Britain towards the enslavement of Africans. It suggests that the single heroic narrative of British Quakers being abolitionists masks the truth that some British Quakers were heavily involved in all aspects of the enslaving industry and that despite Quakers centrally opposing enslaving they were not formally challenged or disowned.The use of family histories to follow the fortunes of these men whilst providing an insight into the early Quaker movement explains how the money generated by enslaving Africans came back into British society to finance infrastructure projects such as canals, turnpikes and country houses, to establish banks and cotton mills supporting the development of the industrial revolution, to provide community welfare projects and enhanced social status for the families. These families present a picture of what was happening to many of the families of the 10,000 people in Britain who invested in the enslaving industry. Their money made a major contribution to building the society in which we live and from which we benefit today at the expense of the labour and lives of past enslaved Africans.


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