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Legacies of British Slave-Ownership: Colonial Slavery and the Formation of Victorian Britain

DOC Legacies of British Slave-Ownership: Colonial Slavery and the Formation of Victorian Britain by Catherine Hall; Nicholas Draper; Keith McClelland; Katie Donington; Rachel Lang in History

Description

Excerpt from War Stories and School-Day Incidents for the ChildrenThese teachers constantly insisted that my talks to their classes on history; which usually included an incident from my personal expe rience in the Confederate Army; were help ful to them in teaching United States history. If the stories contributed to the splendid work they did in history with the classes that suc cessively came under them from year to year; they must have merit and ought to be pre served.About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.comThis book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work; preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases; an imperfection in the original; such as a blemish or missing page; may be replicated in our edition. We do; however; repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.


#526030 in Books Hall Catherine 2016-09-29 2016-09-29Original language:English 9.02 x .71 x 5.98l; #File Name: 1316635260338 pagesLegacies of British Slave Ownership


Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. EssentialBy Peter StreetActually I think it is probably worth five stars; but it's part of a debate which has a long way to go; and against the outcome of which it will be judged. It is also one outcome of an unprecedented research project at University College; London; which has taken a single source; the details of the compensation paid to the owners of slaves in British territories in the mid 1830s; when slavery was finally "abolished" ( for which expression read" replaced by a system of apprenticeship which enabled slave owners to carry on exploiting the "free" labourers on their estates for a few more years"); identify them and their activities and try to assess what difference the compensation made to its recipients. Only a very few actually used it to improve the condition of the former slaves themselves; and the evidence even for that is very scanty.The debate is about the role of slavery in the growth of the British economy as a whole over the two hundred and more years before emancipation; and the material here is only a partial contribution to it. The argument first advanced by Eric Williams; later the first Prime Minister of Trinidad that the slave economy played a decisive role is still open.But this; and Its immediate predecessor; co-author Nicholas Draper's The Price of Emancipation; are vitally important.I still remember my first evening at my British university; in the mid 1950s; when; puzzling over how exactly to eat melon without making a fool of myself; I discovered at dinner I was sitting next to an Etonian; a descendant of a minor Scottish noble line through a very distinguished military figure and who is probably now a pillar of the establishment in some Deputy-Lord-this-or-that form or other. In the brusque gruff way of the period and his peers he talked - not to me - about time he had recently spent in West Africa; learning the way of the world by working on a plantation. Of his black fellow-workers - and this was someone who had already been through the alleged social university of National Service - he said; and I quote; "The only thing they understand is the whip". That was a member of my generation; which was also that of future US figures such as Paul Sarbanes and Frank Sieverts. What; of course; he meant was that that was what he thought HE understood. This was a minor member of the British governing elite beginning his - as they called it in the West Indies - "seasoning"; and starting from there; then..............What this book and its companion and the databases which support them are beginning to do is - among other things - to explore that conversation indirectly. I can't imagine any more cogent historical research than that.

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