William Wilberforce

Standard Name: Wilberforce, William

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending 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...
Instructor Harriet Martineau
Perry had lost most of his male pupils when he converted to Unitarianism. Though the room and curriculum were shared, the boys and girls were separated and unable to see or communicate with one another...
Textual Production Harriet Martineau
Intertextuality and Influence Hannah More
An Estimate of the Religion of the Fashionable World was praised in letters by many of HM 's friends and associates.
Jones, Mary Gwladys. Hannah More. Cambridge University Press.
112
Walpole wrote: It is prettily written, but her enthusiasm increases.
Walpole, Horace. The Letters of Horace Walpole. Editor Toynbee, Mrs Paget, Clarendon.
14: 385
It...
Friends, Associates Hannah More
Her later friendships often blended the personal with the political, like those with Beilby Porteus (Bishop of London from 1787, where she met him) and the abolitionists William Wilberforce (met at Bath the same year)...
Occupation Hannah More
On visits around the Wrington district the More sisters had been horrified by the squalor, want, and ignorance in which the rural poor were living. They felt that knowledge (especially religious knowledge) was the first...
Education J. K. Rowling
At just five Joanne Rowling first went to school: to St Michael's Church of England School in Winterbourne, which had been founded in 1813 in response to a plea by William Wilberforce . In...
Family and Intimate relationships Sarah, Lady Pennington
Their eldest son, John , was born at Bath and baptised in Bath Abbey on 22 May 1741. After two years at Winchester College he joined the army at about fifteen. He resigned his commission...
Friends, Associates Mary Martha Sherwood
Meeting the prison reformer Elizabeth Fry , MMS discussed with her the danger of celebrity, for females especially, and their respective temptations.
Sherwood, Mary Martha, and Henry Sherwood. The Life of Mrs. Sherwood. Editor Kelly, Sophia, Darton.
537
She also enjoyed a meeting with William Wilberforce , and later another...
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...
Friends, Associates Susanna Watts
In her own more local circle, however, SW was relaxed and good company. She belonged to a Book Society . She was a close friend of the Hutton and the Coltman families and especially, in...
politics Susanna Watts
Watts and her maid were two of the original subscribers to the Leicester Ladies Anti-Slavery Society , formed this same month.
Aucott, Shirley. Susanna Watts (1768 to 1842): author of Leicester’s first guide, abolitionist and bluestocking. Shirley Aucott.
30
When William Wilberforce expressed disapproval of ladies' anti-slavery societies, which he said were...

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.