William Wilberforce

Standard Name: Wilberforce, William

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Residence Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington
Marguerite Blessington moved from Mayfair to the spacious and elegant Gore House at Kensington (then outside London); the house had the additional advantages of being quieter and more healthful.
Gore House had once been occupied...
Textual Features Elizabeth Heyrick
EH opens by reminding her readers that although the slave trade had been abolished in Britain and its possessions seventeen years before this, and although trading in slaves was now a felony for British subjects...
Textual Features Elizabeth Sophia Tomlins
Twenty-two of the poems are the sister's, thirty-eight the brother's, and three are written by Eliza, a sister-in-law. An Advertisement gallantly suggests that the lady outshines the gentleman. EST 's verse introduction confesses her early...
Textual Features Martha Hale
She writes on public themes with equal panache, attacking colonial appropriations and in another poem calling Warren Hastings an oppressed hero. She addresses public men and women, and here too is attentive to women's issues...
Textual Features Ann Hatton
Her dedication to William Wilberforce , dated 13 July 1816, is accompanied by a title-page remark about the Christian virtues of the sooty African.
Feminist Companion Archive.
The Africans who appear in the story, kidnapped into slavery...
Textual Production Samuel Johnson
Knight had married a white fellow-servant and needed to be free from his master (a man of some eminence who bitterly opposed letting him go) so that he could earn money. This interesting case, lasting...
Textual Production Anna Letitia Barbauld
ALB , Epistle to William Wilberforce , Esq., on the Rejection of the Bill for Abolishing the Slave Trade, was entered with the Stationers' Company by Joseph Johnson . It was her first new...
Textual Production Harriet Martineau
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Muriel Jaeger
She begins this book with a method not unlike that of Experimental Lives from Cato to George Sand. Her first chapter, Pioneers in Conversion, centres its topic on individuals, relating the sudden transformation...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Elizabeth Charles
The novel tells the story of its female narrator's life during the evangelical revival in the Napoleonic era, [and] proposes religion as the antidote for revolution.
Sutherland, John. The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press.
Bride Danescombe opens her narrative of her life with...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Jane Harvey
The contents include descriptive and melancholy sonnets, satire, autobiography, and politics (including a poem on the horrors of slavery, addressed to William Wilberforce , and another about the sorrow of a woman whose lover has...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Jane Harvey
JH 's broadside sets out to oppose new legislation which would protect farmers by blocking the import of cheap grain. It looks back to a golden time when the poor as well as the rich...

Timeline

16 June 1824: The first meeting of the Society for the...

National or international item

16 June 1824

The first meeting of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (later the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals or RSPCA) took place in London.

8 April 1825: Lucy Townsend hosted a meeting at which the...

National or international item

8 April 1825

Lucy Townsend hosted a meeting at which the first British slavery association for women was formed, the Birmingham Ladies Society for the Relief of Negro Slaves (which later changed its name to the Female Society for Birmingham

1837: Evangelical Thomas Fowell Buxton founded...

National or international item

1837

Evangelical Thomas Fowell Buxton founded the Aborigines Protection Society to stop the slave trade and promote the spread of Christianity among the people of Africa.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.