Tag Archives: Chaloner Arcedeckne
Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 5 December 1792
05/12/1792
At the end of 1792, Taylor wrote to tell Arcedeckne about his fear at the prospect of an end to the slave trade. The Jamaican assembly had produced a report, laying out their opposition to abolition and emphasising the economic value of the current slave system to the mother country. Such economic arguments were an […]
Posted in Abolitionism, British Government, Defence of slavery, Spanish Town, The Letters, Trade Also tagged George Grenville, Simon Taylor, William Grenville, William Pitt Comments Off on Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 5 December 1792
Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 5 December 1792
05/12/1792
Following a petition by free people of colour seeking civil rights to the Jamaican assembly, Taylor confided to Arcedeckne that he feared that events could go the same way in Jamaica as they had in French Saint-Domingue, where clashes between free people of colour and whites had preceded a large-scale slave uprising. He was worried […]
Posted in Abolitionism, Christianity, Defence of slavery, Free people of colour, Revolution, Spanish Town, St Domingue/Hispaniola, The Letters Also tagged Granville Sharp, Simon Taylor, Thomas Clarkson, William Wilberforce Comments Off on Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 5 December 1792
Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 6 October 1792
06/10/1792
On his return to Jamaica, Taylor wrote to tell Arcedeckne about his voyage and the time he had spent in England, which was an even more disagreeable episode to him than when the sugar canes on his Holland estate had been afflicted by disease (‘the blast’). In particular, he despaired at British attitudes towards slavery […]
Posted in Abolitionism, British Government, Kingston, Plantation management, Pronatalism, Revolution, Slave trade abolition, The Letters Also tagged Simon Taylor, William Grenville, William Pitt Comments Off on Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 6 October 1792
Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 21 May 1792
21/05/1792
Taylor travelled from Jamaica to Britain in 1791. It is likely that he was at sea when the August 1791 rebellion by enslaved people in French Saint-Domingue broke out. He received news of it while in London in the autumn and remained in Britain until the summer of 1792. While there, he visited Arcedeckne in […]
Posted in Abolitionism, British Government, Place of writing: London, Revolution, Slave trade abolition, St Domingue/Hispaniola, The Letters Also tagged Simon Taylor Comments Off on Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 21 May 1792
Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 17 January 1791
17/01/1791
As the abolition debate continued, Taylor’s frustration rose and his language grew more colourful. In his view, abolitionists were behaving unreasonably by interfering with a lucrative system that he thought was best left to the oversight and management of slave-traders and slaveholders. His reference to events in the French islands is probably to the failed […]
Posted in Abolitionism, British Government, Kingston, Revolution, Slave trade abolition, The Letters, Trade Also tagged Louis XIV, Simon Taylor, Vincent Ogé, William Pitt, William Wilberforce Comments Off on Simon Taylor to Chaloner Arcedeckne, 17 January 1791