Abolitionism and the Back-to-Africa Movement in Britain: The Sierra Leone Experiment
Authors:
Pavlin
Atanasov
St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
Pages:
13-
25
DOI: https://doi.org/10.54664/UTKS6345
Abstract:
The article focuses on the settlement of freed black slaves from England and Nova Scotia in Sierra Leone. As
the eighteenth century drew to a close, plans were made for the “repatriation” of impoverished migrants of
African descent to their “ancestral” land. Such plans were contextually defined by the abolitionist movement
in Britain. Abolitionism gained exceptional momentum in the country that played a leading part in the transatlantic
slave trade at that time. The movement aimed to end both the slave trade and slavery. The article investigates
the activities of the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor and especially the role of the prominent British
philanthropist and abolitionist Granville Sharp (1735–1813), who made significant efforts to bring the
“repatriation” plans to fruition. I argue that the Sierra Leone project was an ambivalent experiment, which
should be interpreted in the light of both humanitarian compassion and imperial interests: if, at first, it was
premised upon idealism and religious fervour, the desire to set foot in west Africa and to set up a colony there
subsequently prevailed. For some Britons, sending impoverished free blacks to distant shores was also an
opportunity to expel them from their own “white” society. In this sense, the “repatriation” of Africans was
most likely to occur in the form of deportation, a form that suggests the restrictive regime of penal colonies,
such as Australia.
Keywords:
Sierra Leone, slave trade, abolitionism, humanitarianism, Back-to-Africa movement, Granville Sharp,
Province of Freedom, colonization, migration.
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