THE EXTINCTION OF THE SLAVE-TRADE, AND THE CIVILIZATION OF AFRICA: A REVIEW OF "THE AFRICAN SLAVE - TRADE, AND ITS REMEDY," BY SIR THOMAS FOWELL BUXTON, BART. REPRINTED FROM THE WESLEYAN - METHODIST MAGAZINE FOR JULY, 1840

  • London: Published by John Mason, 1840
By [Buxton, Thomas Fowell]
London: Published by John Mason, 1840. 26pp. Disbound with scattered foxing, Good+.

Despite herculean efforts to secure its abolition, "The African slave-trade now prevails to a much greater extent, and inflicts on its unhappy victims a much larger amount of suffering, than ever." Maybe, the author speculates, it's the fault of the reformers: We resolved to "cease to do evil," but we did not resolve "to do well, by making reparation to Africa for the wrongs which had been inflicted." The pernicious trade encouraged "warlike and predatory habits" among the Africans.
The solution: spread Christianity among the Africans.
Not in Work. See LCP 1900-1904 for editions of Buxton's "The African Slave-Trade." OCLC records thirteen locations under several accession numbers as of October 2024.

Details

Title

THE EXTINCTION OF THE SLAVE-TRADE, AND THE CIVILIZATION OF AFRICA: A REVIEW OF "THE AFRICAN SLAVE - TRADE, AND ITS REMEDY," BY SIR THOMAS FOWELL BUXTON, BART. REPRINTED FROM THE WESLEYAN - METHODIST MAGAZINE FOR JULY, 1840

Author

[Buxton, Thomas Fowell]

Condition

Unknown

Publisher

Published by John Mason: London

Date

1840


MORE FROM THIS SELLER

David M. Lesser, Fine Antiquarian Books LLC

David Matthew Lesser

One Bradley Rd., Ste. 302
Woodbridge, CT 06525

Specializing in Americana: Colonial, Revolutionary, Early Federal, Presidency, Political & Social Issues, Slavery, Civil War, Afro-Americana, Reconstruction, Economics, Banking, Trade, Law, Early & Unusual American Imprints