Mode of access: Internet. ; BANC; HT1165.G7 1823: With: Great Britain. Parliament, 1823. House of Commons. Substance of the debate . on the 15th May, 1823. London, 1823.
With this are bound: Clarkson, Thomas. Essai sur les désavantages politiques de la traite des Nègres; Wilberforce, William. Lettre à son Excellence Monseigneur le Prince de Talleyrand Périgord au sujet de la traite des Négres; Simonde de Sismondi, J.C.L. De l'intérét de la France à l'égard de la traite des Nègres. Nouvelles réflexions sur la traite des Nègres; Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Résumé du témoignage donné devant un comité de la Chambre des Communes de la Grande-Bretagne et de l'Irlande. ; On spine: Esclavage des Nègres. ; Microfilm. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Letter to the Mayor [Samuel Atkins Eliot] and Aldermen of Boston [Massachusetts] from Francis Jackson and 11 other committee members [of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society] arguing a recent denial for permission to use Faneuil Hall for a meeting about slave trade in the District of Columbia.
resolutions agreed upon during a January 25, 1838, Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society meeting criticizing the Congressional Gag Law and slaveholding in general.
Thomas Clarkson (1760–1846) was a leading campaigner against slavery and the African slave trade. After graduating from St. John's College, Cambridge in 1783, Clarkson with Granville Sharp (1735–1813) founded the Committee for the Abolition of the African Slave Trade in 1787, which increased popular support for abolition and was the main campaigner behind the abolition of the slave trade. These volumes, first published in 1808, contain a unique contemporary account of the abolition movement from one of its major leaders. Clarkson describes in great detail the Quaker background to the abolitionist movement and the parliamentary debates leading to the Slave Trade Act of 1807. The contemporary arguments both in support and in opposition to abolition and the researches and actions of the abolition movement's members are described, creating an important historical record of the movement. Volume 1 contains the early history of the abolition movement until July 1788
Call for an anti-abolition convention for Windsor County at Quechee, Vermont; formatted as a series of resolutions and in the handwriting of Alden Partridge. The document is undated with the poposed convention to be held in November, but no year given; based on the content it may have been written in 1835. ; Transcription by Joseph Byrne. Transcriptions may be subject to error.