Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves

Front Cover
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2005 - 468 pages
We cannot imagine citizen activism without boycotts, mass mailings, political posters, lapel buttons, or media campaigns. Yet all these weapons were invented or perfected by a printer, a lawyer, a cleric, several merchants, and a musician who first convened in a London bookshop in 1787. Their goal: to end slavery in the largest empire on earth. They combined fiery devotion with uncanny skill at stoking public opinion. Within five years, more than 300,000 Britons were boycotting the chief slave-made product, sugar, and London"s smart set was sporting antislavery badges created by Josiah Wedgwood. This crusade was spearheaded by a striking array of personalities, among them Olaudah Equiano, an ex-slave whose memoir made him famous; John Newton, a former slave ship captain who wrote "Amazing Grace"; and Thomas Clarkson, a pioneering investigative journalist who worked for fifty years to see the day when a slave whip and chains were formally buried in a Jamaican churchyard.

From inside the book

Contents

Twelve Men in a Printing Shop
1
WORLD OF BONDAGE
9
Many Golden Dreams
11
Atlantic Wanderer
30
Intoxicated with Liberty
41
King Sugar
54
A Tale of Two Ships
69
FROM TINDER TO FLAME
83
High Noon in Parliament
226
WAR AND REVOLUTION
239
Bleak Decade
241
At the Foot of Vesuvius
256
Redcoats Graveyard
280
These Gilded Africans
288
BURY THE CHAINS
297
A Side Wind
299

A Moral Steam Engine
85
The First Emancipation
98
I Questioned Whether I Should Even Get Out of It Alive
106
Am I Not a Man and a Brother?
122
A Place Beyond the Seas
143
Ramsay Is DeadI Have Killed Him
152
A WHOLE NATION CRYING WITH ONE VOICE
165
An EighteenthCentury Book Tour
167
The BloodSweetened Beverage
181
Promised Land
199
The Sweets of Liberty
213
Am I Not a Woman and a Sister?
309
Come Shout Oer the Grave
333
To Feed a Just Indignation
355
Where Was Equiano Born?
369
Source Notes
373
Bibliography
409
Acknowledgments
428
ILLUSTRATION CREDITS
431
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information