The Anti-slavery Reporter and Aborigines' FriendL. Wild, 1969 - Slavery Vols. 3-8, 3d ser., include the 16th-21st annual reports of the British and foreign anti-slavery society. The 22d-24th annual reports are appended to v. 9-11, 3d ser. Series 4 contains annual reports of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. Series 5 contains annual reports of the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society. |
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Results 1-3 of 87
Page 3
... planters have already reached , and with what accelerated rapidity they are now increasing ; for the sugar estates recently brought to sale , and now in the court of chancery in this island and in England , amount to about one fourth of ...
... planters have already reached , and with what accelerated rapidity they are now increasing ; for the sugar estates recently brought to sale , and now in the court of chancery in this island and in England , amount to about one fourth of ...
Page 21
... planters , the merchants , and the news- papers , and is formally announced by Lord Grey as a leading feature of the policy of the Colonial Office . Things differing more in degree than in essence from the slave - trade and slavery ...
... planters , the merchants , and the news- papers , and is formally announced by Lord Grey as a leading feature of the policy of the Colonial Office . Things differing more in degree than in essence from the slave - trade and slavery ...
Page 58
... planters to carry out its reasonable provisions . To the proof , then , of what I now assert . Some foot or five months after this debate in the Court of Policy , a medical commissioner was specially appointed to visit every plantation ...
... planters to carry out its reasonable provisions . To the proof , then , of what I now assert . Some foot or five months after this debate in the Court of Policy , a medical commissioner was specially appointed to visit every plantation ...
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Common terms and phrases
abolition of slavery adopted African amount Anti-Slavery Society appears Brazil Brazilian British Guiana British markets carried coast of Africa coloured Committee consequence Coolies cost cotton cruisers Cuba cultivation demand despatch dollars duty emancipation emigration England estates evidence existing expense exports fact favour foreign free labour freedom friends gentleman give Governor Guiana Havana honour House human immigration imported increase India interest island Jamaica Kroo land laws liberty Lord Lord Grey Lord John Russell Lord Palmerston lordship Majesty's Government Martinique Mauritius means measures meeting ment moral nation negroes number of slaves object obtained opinion Parliament parties petition petitioners planters population present principle produce proposed proprietors question resolution Rio de Janeiro ship Sierra Leone slave-grown sugars slave-trade slaveholders Spain Spanish squadron Sugar Act supply suppression taken territory tion trade traffic treaties Trinidad vessels wages West Indies Wilmot Proviso