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English politician and abolitionist ( 1759-1833 )
For his eldest son , a lawyer and Member of Parliament , see William Wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
William Wilberforce Portrait by Karl Anton Hickel , c. 1794 Member of Parliament
In office 31 October 1780 -
February 1825 Preceded by David Hartley Succeeded by Arthur Gough-Calthorpe Constituency * Kingston upon Hull ( 1780-1784 ) * Yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * Bramber ( 1812-1825 ) Personal details Born ( 1759-08-24) 24 August 1759 Kingston upon Hull , Yorkshire , England Died 29 July 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) Belgravia , London , England Resting place Westminster Abbey Political party Independent Spouse Barbara Spooner ​ ( m.
1797 ) ​ Children 6 , including Robert , Samuel and Henry Alma mater St John 's College , Cambridge Signature Venerated in Anglicanism Feast 30 July William Wilberforce ( 24 August 1759 - 29 July 1833 ) was a British politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the Atlantic slave trade .
A native of Kingston upon Hull , Yorkshire , he began his political career in 1780 , and became an independent Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) .
In 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an Evangelical Anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
In 1787 , Wilberforce came into contact with Thomas Clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including Granville Sharp , Hannah More and Charles Middleton .
They persuaded Wilberforce to take on the cause of abolition , and he became a leading English abolitionist .
He headed the parliamentary campaign against the British slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807 .
Wilberforce was convinced of the importance of religion , morality and education .
He was involved in causes and campaigns such as the Society for the Suppression of Vice , British missionary work in India , the creation of a free colony in Sierra Leone , the foundation of the Church Mission Society and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals .
His underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
Wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from Parliament because of health issues .
That campaign led to the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 , which abolished slavery in most of the British Empire .
Wilberforce died just three days after hearing that the passage of the act through Parliament was assured .
He was buried in Westminster
Abbey , close to his friend William Pitt the Younger .
Early life and education Wilberforce was born in Hull , in Yorkshire , England , on 24 August 1759 .
He was the only son of Robert Wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , Elizabeth Bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
His grandfather , William ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune in the maritime trade with Baltic countries .
He was twice elected mayor of Hull .
Wilberforce was a small , sickly and delicate child with poor eyesight .
In 1767 , he began attending Hull Grammar School , which at the time was headed by Joseph Milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
Wilberforce profited from the supportive atmosphere at the school , until his father died in 1768 .
With his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old Wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both St James 's Place , London , and Wimbledon .
He attended an " indifferent " boarding school in Putney for two years and spent his holidays in Wimbledon , where he grew extremely fond of his relatives .
He became interested in evangelical Christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt Hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant John Thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading Methodist preacher , George Whitefield .
Wilberforce 's staunchly Church of England mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to Hull in 1771 .
Wilberforce was heartbroken at being separated from his aunt and uncle .
His family opposed a return to Hull Grammar School because the headmaster had become a Methodist , and Wilberforce continued his education at Pocklington School from 1771 to 1776 .
Influenced by Methodist scruples , he initially resisted Hull 's lively social life , but , as his religious fervour diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls , and played cards .
statue on a lawn of a two-storey Georgian house A statue of William Wilberforce outside Wilberforce House , his birthplace in Hull
In October 1776 , at the age of seventeen , Wilberforce went up to St John 's College , Cambridge .
The deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
Instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
Witty , generous and an excellent conversationalist , Wilberforce was a popular figure .
He made many friends , including the more studious future Prime Minister William Pitt .
Despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1781 and a Master of Arts degree in 1788 .
Early parliamentary career Wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and Pitt frequently watched House of Commons debates from the gallery .
Pitt , already set on a political career , encouraged Wilberforce to join him in obtaining a parliamentary seat .
In September 1780 , at the age of 21 and while still a student , Wilberforce was elected Member of Parliament for Kingston upon Hull , spending over £8,000 , as was the custom of the time , to ensure he received the necessary votes .
Free from financial pressures , Wilberforce sat as an independent , resolving to be " no party man " .
Criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both Tory and Whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
Wilberforce attended Parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as Goostree 's and Boodle 's in Pall Mall , London .
The writer and socialite Madame de Staël described him as the " wittiest man in England " and , according to Georgiana , Duchess of Devonshire , the Prince of Wales said that he would go anywhere to hear Wilberforce sing .
Wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author James Boswell witnessed Wilberforce 's eloquence in the House of Commons and noted , " I saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as I listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
During the frequent government changes of 1781-1784 , Wilberforce supported his friend Pitt in parliamentary debates .
In autumn 1783 , Pitt , Wilberforce and Edward Eliot travelled to France for a six-week holiday together .
After a difficult start in Rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were English spies , they visited Paris , meeting Benjamin Franklin , General Lafayette , Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI , and joined the French court at Fontainebleau .
Pitt became Prime Minister in December 1783 , with Wilberforce a key supporter of his minority government .
Despite their close friendship , there is no record that Pitt offered Wilberforce a ministerial position in this or future governments .
This may have been due to Wilberforce 's wish to remain an independent MP.
Alternatively , Wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced Pitt that he was not ministerial material .
When Parliament was dissolved in the spring of 1784 , Wilberforce decided to stand as a candidate for the county of Yorkshire in the 1784 general election .
On 6 April , he was returned as MP for Yorkshire at the age of twenty-four .
Conversion
In October 1784 , Wilberforce embarked upon a tour of Europe with his mother , sister and Isaac Milner , the younger brother of his former headmaster .
They visited the French Riviera and had dinners , played cards , and gambled .
In February 1785 , Wilberforce returned to London temporarily , to support Pitt 's proposals for parliamentary reforms .
He rejoined the party in Genoa , Italy , and they continued their tour to Switzerland .
Milner accompanied Wilberforce to England , and on the journey they read " The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul " by Philip Doddridge , a leading early 18th-century English nonconformist .
An oil-on-canvas portrait of Wilberforce holding a pen .
William Wilberforce by John Rising , 1790 , pictured at the age of 30 Wilberforce 's spiritual journey is thought to have changed course at this time .
He started to rise early to read the Bible and pray and kept a private journal .
He underwent an evangelical conversion , regretting his past life and resolving to commit his future life and work to the service of God .
His conversion changed some of his habits , but not his nature : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others towards his new faith .
Inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality , use of time , vanity , self-control and relationships with others .
At the time , religious enthusiasm was generally regarded as a social transgression and was stigmatised in polite society .
Evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and Wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
He sought guidance from John Newton , a leading evangelical Anglican clergyman of the day and Rector of St Mary Woolnoth .
Both counselled him to remain in politics , and he resolved to do so " with increased diligence and conscientiousness " .
His political views were informed by his faith and by his desire to promote Christianity and Christian ethics in private and public life .
His views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a God-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the Sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
He was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many Tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
In 1786 , Wilberforce leased a house in Old Palace Yard , Westminster , in order to be near Parliament .
He began using his parliamentary position to advocate reform by introducing a Registration Bill , proposing limited changes to parliamentary election procedures .
In response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
The bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
The House of Commons passed both bills , but they were defeated in the House of Lords .
Abolition of the transatlantic slave trade Initial decision
The British initially became involved in the slave trade during the 16th century .
By 1783 , the triangular route that took British-made goods to Africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the West Indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to Britain , represented about 80 percent of Great Britain 's foreign income .
British ships dominated the slave trade , supplying French , Spanish , Dutch , Portuguese and British colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the Atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
Of the estimated 11 million Africans transported into slavery , about 1.4 million died during the voyage .
The British campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the Quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to Parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
The same year , Wilberforce , while dining with his Cambridge friend Gerard Edwards , met Rev.
James Ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of St Christopher ( later St Kitts ) .
Ramsay was horrified by the conditions endured by the enslaved peoples , both at sea and on the plantations and returned to England and joined abolitionist movements .
Wilberforce did not follow up on his meeting with Ramsay , but three years later , inspired by his new faith , Wilberforce became interested in humanitarian reform .
In November 1786 , he received a letter from Sir Charles Middleton that re-opened his interest in the slave trade .
Middleton suggested that Wilberforce bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in Parliament .
Wilberforce responded that he " felt the great importance of the subject , and thought himself unequal to the task allotted to him , but yet would not positively decline it " .
He began to read widely on the subject and met with a group of abolitionists called the Testonites at Middleton 's home in the early winter of 1786-1787 .
see caption Diagram of a slave ship , the Brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported In early 1787 , Thomas Clarkson met with Wilberforce for the first time at Old Palace Yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
Clarkson visited Wilberforce weekly , bringing first-hand evidence he had obtained about the slave trade .
The Quakers , already working for abolition , recognised the need for influence within Parliament , and urged Clarkson to secure a commitment from Wilberforce to bring forward the case for abolition in the House of Commons .
It was arranged that Bennet Langton , a Lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of Wilberforce and Clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 March 1787 to ask Wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
By the end of the evening , Wilberforce had agreed in general terms that he would bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in Parliament , " provided that no person more proper could be found " .
The same spring , on 12 May 1787 , the still hesitant Wilberforce held a conversation with William Pitt and the future Prime Minister William Grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on Pitt 's estate in Kent .
Under what came to be known as the " Wilberforce Oak " at Holwood House , Pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
Wilberforce 's response is not recorded , but he later declared this was when he decided to bring forward the motion .
Early parliamentary action Wilberforce had planned to introduce a motion giving notice that he would bring forward a bill for the Abolition of the Slave Trade during the 1789 parliamentary session .
However , in January 1788 , he was taken ill with a probable stress-related condition , now thought to be ulcerative colitis .
It was several months before he was able to resume work , and he spent time convalescing at Bath and Cambridge .
His regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
In Wilberforce 's absence , Pitt , who had long been supportive of abolition , introduced the preparatory motion himself , and ordered a Privy Council investigation into the slave trade , followed by a House of Commons review .
A black man with shackles around their wrists and ankles is kneeling to the right .
An inscription at the bottom reads " " Am I not a man and a brother ? "
" Am I Not A Man And A Brother ? "
Medallion created as part of anti-slavery campaign by Josiah Wedgwood , 1787
With the publication of the Privy Council report in April 1789 and following months of planning , Wilberforce commenced his parliamentary campaign .
On 12 May 1789 , he made his first major speech on the subject of abolition in the House of Commons , in which he reasoned that the trade was morally reprehensible and an issue of natural justice .
Drawing on Thomas Clarkson 's mass of evidence , he described in detail the appalling conditions in which enslaved people travelled from Africa in the middle passage and argued that abolishing the trade would also bring an improvement to the conditions of existing slaves in the West Indies .
He moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
With several parliamentarians signalling support for the bill , the opponents of abolition delayed the vote by proposing that the House of Commons hear its own evidence ; Wilberforce , in a decision that has been criticised for prolonging the slave trade , reluctantly agreed .
The hearings were not completed by the end of the parliamentary session and were deferred until the following year .
In the meantime , Wilberforce and Clarkson tried unsuccessfully to take advantage of the egalitarian atmosphere of the French Revolution to press for France 's abolition of the trade .
In January 1790 , Wilberforce succeeded in speeding up the hearings by gaining approval for a smaller parliamentary select committee to consider the vast quantity of evidence which had been accumulated .
Wilberforce 's house in
Old Palace Yard became a centre for the abolitionists ' campaign and the location for many strategy meetings .
Petitioners for other causes also besieged him there .
Let us not despair ; it is a blessed cause , and success , ere long , will crown our exertions .
Already we have gained one victory ; we have obtained , for these poor creatures , the recognition of their human nature , which , for a while was most shamefully denied .
This is the first fruits of our efforts ; let us persevere and our triumph will be complete .
Never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the Christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
William Wilberforce — speech before the House of Commons , 18 April 1791 Interrupted by a general election in June 1790 , the committee finished hearing witnesses and in April 1791 , with a closely reasoned four-hour speech , Wilberforce introduced the first parliamentary bill to abolish the slave trade .
After two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the French Revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the French West Indies .
A protracted parliamentary campaign to abolish slavery continued , and Wilberforce remained committed to this cause despite frustration and hostility .
He was supported by fellow members of the Clapham Sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin Henry Thornton .
Wilberforce accepted an invitation to share a house with Henry Thornton in 1792 , moving into his own home after Thornton 's marriage in 1796 .
Wilberforce , the Clapham Sect and others were anxious to demonstrate that Africans , and particularly freed slaves , had human and economic abilities beyond the slave trade and capable of sustaining a well-ordered society , trade and cultivation .
Inspired in part by the utopian vision of Granville Sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in Sierra Leone with black settlers from Britain , Nova Scotia and Jamaica , as well as native Africans and some whites .
They formed the Sierra Leone Company , with Wilberforce subscribing liberally to the project in money and time .
On 2 April 1792 , Wilberforce brought another bill calling for abolition of the slave trade .
Henry Dundas , as Home Secretary , proposed a compromise solution of gradual abolition of the trade over several years .
This was passed by 230 to 85 votes , but Wilberforce believed that it was little more than a clever ploy to ensure that total abolition would be delayed indefinitely .
War with France
On 26 February 1793 , another vote to abolish the slave trade was narrowly defeated by eight votes .
The outbreak of war with France the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
The same year , and again in 1794 , Wilberforce unsuccessfully brought before Parliament a bill to outlaw British ships from supplying enslaved people to foreign colonies .
He voiced his concern about the war and urged Pitt and his government to make greater efforts to end hostilities .
Growing more alarmed , on 31 December 1794 , Wilberforce moved that the government seek a peaceful resolution with France , a stance that created a temporary breach in his long friendship with Pitt .
Abolition continued to be associated in the public consciousness with the French Revolution and with British radical groups , resulting in a decline in public support .
Despite this , Wilberforce continued to introduce abolition bills throughout the 1790s .
The early years of the 19th century saw an increased public interest in abolition .
In June 1804 , Wilberforce 's bill to abolish the slave trade successfully passed all its stages through the House of Commons .
However , it was too late in the parliamentary session for it to complete its passage through the House of Lords .
On its reintroduction during the 1805 session , it was defeated , with even the usually sympathetic Pitt failing to support it .
On this occasion and throughout the campaign , abolition was held back by Wilberforce 's trusting , even credulous nature , and his deferential attitude towards those in power .
He found it difficult to believe that men of rank would not do what he perceived to be the right thing , and was reluctant to confront them when they did not .
Final phase of the campaign see caption The House of Commons in Wilberforce 's day by Augustus Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson ( 1808-1811 )
Following Pitt 's death in January 1806 , Wilberforce increased his collaboration with the Whigs , especially the abolitionists .
He gave general support to the Grenville-Fox administration , which brought more abolitionists into the cabinet ; Wilberforce and Charles Fox led the campaign in the House of Commons .
A radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban British subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the French colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer James Stephen .
A bill was introduced and approved by the cabinet , and Wilberforce and other abolitionists maintained a self-imposed silence , so as not to draw any attention to the effect of the bill .
The approach was successful and the Foreign Slave Trade Bill received royal assent on 23 May 1806 .
Wilberforce and Clarkson collected a large volume of evidence against the slave trade over the previous two decades , and Wilberforce spent the latter part of 1806 writing A Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade , which was a comprehensive restatement of the abolitionists ' case .
Wilberforce was re-elected as an MP for Yorkshire in the 1806
United Kingdom general election , after which he returned to finishing and publishing his Letter , a 400-page book which formed the basis for the final phase of the campaign .
Lord Grenville , the Prime Minister , successfully introduced an Abolition Bill in the House of Lords first , then Charles Grey moved for a second reading in the Commons on 23 February 1807 .
As tributes were made to Wilberforce , whose face streamed with tears , the bill was carried by 283 votes to 16 .
Excited supporters suggested taking advantage of the large majority to seek the abolition of slavery itself , but Wilberforce made it clear that total emancipation was not the immediate goal .
Personal life
In his youth , William Wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend Thomas Babington recommended 25-year-old Barbara Ann Spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
Wilberforce met her two days later on 15 April 1797 , and was immediately smitten ; following an eight-day whirlwind romance , he proposed .
Despite the urgings of friends to slow down , the couple married at the Church of St Swithin in Bath , Somerset , on 30 May 1797 .
They were devoted to each other , and Barbara was very attentive and supportive to Wilberforce in his increasing ill health , though she showed little interest in his political activities .
They had six children in fewer than ten years :
William ( born 1798 ) , Barbara ( born 1799 ) , Elizabeth ( born 1801 ) , Robert ( born 1802 ) , Samuel ( born 1805 ) and Henry ( born 1807 ) .
Wilberforce was an indulgent and adoring father who revelled in his time at home and at play with his children .
Other concerns Political and social reform Wilberforce was highly conservative on many political and social issues .
He advocated change in society through Christianity and improvement in morals , education and religion , fearing and opposing radical causes and revolution .
The radical writer William Cobbett was among those who attacked what they saw as Wilberforce 's hypocrisy in campaigning for better working conditions for enslaved people while British workers lived in terrible conditions at home .
Critics noted Wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for Pitt 's " Gagging Bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
Wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the Combination Act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout Britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
He also opposed an enquiry into the 1819 Peterloo Massacre in which eleven protesters were killed at a political rally demanding reform .
Concerned about " bad men who wished to produce anarchy and confusion " , he approved of the government 's Six Acts , which further limited public meetings and seditious writings .
Wilberforce 's actions led the essayist William Hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital Christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
An unfinished oil portrait of Wilberforce .
The face and shoulders are painted , while the rest of the portrait contains a sketched outline .
Unfinished portrait by Sir Thomas Lawrence , 1828 Wilberforce 's views of women and religion were also conservative .
He disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as Elizabeth Heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in Scripture . "
Wilberforce initially strongly opposed bills for Catholic emancipation , which would have allowed Catholics to become MPs , hold public office and serve in the army , although by 1813 , he had changed his views and spoke in favour of a similar bill .
Wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the Game laws .
He recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when Hannah More and her sister established Sunday schools for the poor in Somerset and the Mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and Anglican clergy .
From the late 1780s onward , Wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of Commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
With others , Wilberforce founded the world 's first animal welfare organisation , the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ( later the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ) .
He was also opposed to duelling , which he described as the " disgrace of a Christian society " and was appalled when his friend Pitt engaged in a duel with George Tierney in 1798 , particularly as it occurred on a Sunday , the Christian day of rest .
Wilberforce was generous with his time and money , believing that those with wealth had a duty to give a significant portion of their income to the needy .
Yearly , he gave away thousands of pounds , much of it to clergymen to distribute in their parishes .
He paid off the debts of others , supported education and missions , and in a year of food shortages , gave to charity more than his own yearly income .
He was exceptionally hospitable , and could not bear to sack any of his servants .
As a result , his home was full of old and incompetent servants kept on in charity .
Although he was often months behind in his correspondence , Wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
Evangelical Christianity
A supporter of the evangelical wing of the Church of England , Wilberforce believed that the revitalisation of the church and individual Christian observance would lead to a harmonious , moral society .
He sought to elevate the status of religion in public and private life , making piety fashionable in both the upper- and middle-classes of society .
To this end , in April 1797 , Wilberforce published A Practical View of the Prevailing Religious System of Professed Christians in the Higher and Middle Classes of This Country Contrasted With Real Christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
This was an exposition of New Testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of Christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
The book was influential and a best-seller ; 7,500 copies were sold within six months , and it was translated into several languages .
Wilberforce fostered and supported missionary activity in Britain and abroad , and was involved with other members of the Clapham Sect in various evangelical and charitable organisations .
He was a founding member of the Church Missionary Society ( since renamed the Church Mission Society ) and an early vice-president of the London Society for promoting Christianity among the Jews ( later the Church 's Ministry Among Jewish People ) .
Horrified by the lack of Christian evangelism in India , Wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the British East India Company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of Indians .
The plan was unsuccessful due to lobbying by the directors of the company , who feared that their commercial interests would be damaged .
Wilberforce tried again in 1813 when the charter next came up for renewal .
Using petitions , meetings , lobbying and letter writing , he successfully campaigned for changes to the charter .
Speaking in favour of the Charter Act 1813 , he criticised the East India Company and their rule in India for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of Hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
Moral reform Greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of British society , Wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
At the suggestion of Wilberforce and Bishop Porteus , King George III was requested by the Archbishop of Canterbury to issue in 1787
A Proclamation for the Encouragement of Piety and Virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
The proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the Lord 's Day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
Greeted largely with public indifference , Wilberforce sought to increase its impact by mobilising public figures to the cause , and by founding the Society for the Suppression of Vice .
This and other societies in which Wilberforce was a prime mover , mustered support for the prosecution of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws , including brothel keepers , distributors of pornographic material , and those who did not respect the Sabbath .
The writer and clergyman Sydney Smith criticised Wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " Society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
Wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and Sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
By the end of his life , British morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the Victorian era .
Emancipation of enslaved Africans Wilberforce worked with the members of the African Institution to ensure the enforcement of the abolition of the slave trade and to promote abolitionist negotiations with other countries .
In particular , the United States had abolished the slave trade after 1808 and Wilberforce lobbied the American government to enforce its own mandated prohibition more strongly .
The same year , Wilberforce moved his family from Clapham to a sizeable mansion with a large garden in Kensington Gore , closer to the Houses of Parliament .
In worsening health by 1812 , Wilberforce resigned his Yorkshire seat , and became MP for the rotten borough of Bramber in Sussex , a seat with little or no constituency obligations , thus allowing him more time for his family and the causes that interested him .
From 1816 , Wilberforce introduced a series of bills which would require the compulsory registration of enslaved people , together with details of their country of origin , permitting the illegal importation of foreign slaves to be detected .
Later in the same year he began to publicly denounce slavery itself , though he did not demand immediate emancipation , believing incremental change to be more effective in achieving abolition .
In 1820 , after a period of poor health and with his eyesight failing , Wilberforce further limited public activities , although he became embroiled in unsuccessful mediation attempts between King George
IV , and his estranged wife Caroline of Brunswick , who had sought her rights as queen of the realm .
Wilberforce still hoped " to lay a foundation for some future measures for the emancipation of the poor slaves " .
Aware that the cause would need younger men to continue the work , in 1821 he asked MP Thomas Fowell Buxton to take over leadership of the campaign in the Commons .
As the 1820s continued , Wilberforce increasingly became more of a figurehead for the abolitionist movement , although he continued to appear at anti-slavery meetings , welcoming visitors , and maintaining a busy correspondence on the subject .
In 1823 Wilberforce 's 56-page " Appeal to the Religion , Justice and Humanity of the Inhabitants of the British Empire in Behalf of the Negro Slaves in the West Indies " was published .
The treatise stated that total emancipation was morally and ethically required and that slavery was a national crime which must be ended by parliamentary legislation to gradually abolish slavery .
Members of Parliament did not agree , and government opposition in March 1823 stymied Wilberforce 's call for abolition .
On 15 May 1823 , Buxton moved another resolution in Parliament for gradual emancipation .
Subsequent debates followed on 16
March and 11 June 1824 in which Wilberforce made his last speeches in the House of Commons , and which again saw the emancipationists outmanoeuvred by the government .
Last years
Wilberforce 's health was continuing to fail , and he suffered further illnesses in 1824 and 1825 .
With his family concerned that his life was endangered , he declined a peerage and resigned his seat in Parliament , leaving the campaign to others .
A marble statue of Wilberforce , with an inscription beneath it Wilberforce was buried in Westminster Abbey next to Pitt .
This memorial statue , by Samuel Joseph ( 1791-1850 ) , was erected in 1840 in the north choir aisle .
In 1826 , Wilberforce moved from his large house in Kensington Gore to Hendon Park , a more modest property in the countryside of Mill Hill , north of London , where he was joined by his son William and family .
William had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
This left Wilberforce with little income , and he was obliged to let his home and spend the rest of his life visiting family members and friends .
He continued his support for the anti-slavery cause , including attending and chairing meetings of the Anti-Slavery Society .
Wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive Whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their Reform Bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
In 1833 , Wilberforce 's health declined further and he suffered a severe attack of influenza from which he never fully recovered .
He made a final anti-slavery speech in April 1833 at a public meeting in Maidstone , Kent .
The following month , the
Whig government introduced the Bill for the Abolition of Slavery , formally saluting Wilberforce in the process .
On 26 July 1833 , Wilberforce heard of government concessions that guaranteed the passing of the Bill for the Abolition of Slavery .
The following day he grew much weaker , and he died early on the morning of 29 July at his cousin 's house in Cadogan Place , London .
Funeral Wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at St Mary 's Church , Stoke Newington , just north of London .
However , the leading members of both Houses of Parliament urged that he be honoured with a burial in Westminster Abbey .
The family agreed and , on 3 August 1833 , Wilberforce was buried in the north transept , close to his friend William Pitt .
The funeral was attended by many Members of Parliament , as well as by members of the public .
The pallbearers included the Duke of Gloucester , the Lord Chancellor Henry Brougham , and the Speaker of the House of Commons Charles Manners-Sutton .
While tributes were paid and Wilberforce was laid to rest , both Houses of Parliament suspended their business as a mark of respect .
Legacy
Five years after his death , sons Robert and Samuel Wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
The biography was controversial in that the authors emphasised Wilberforce 's role in the abolition movement and played down the important work of Thomas Clarkson .
Clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
For more than a century , Wilberforce 's role in the campaign dominated the historical record .
Later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between Clarkson and Wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by Wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by Clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
As his sons had desired and planned , Wilberforce has long been viewed as a Christian hero , a statesman-saint held up as a role model for putting his faith into action .
Contemporary evangelical and conservative movements in North America appropriate his name and example in their activism .
The strategies of Wilberforce and other abolitionists are invoked by anti-abortion activists , who controversially equate the abolition of slavery with ending abortion .
Wilberforce has also been described as a humanitarian reformer who contributed to reshaping the political and social attitudes of the time by promoting concepts of social responsibility and action .
In the 1940s , the role of Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect in abolition was downplayed by historian Eric Williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the West Indian sugar industry was in decline .
Williams 's approach strongly influenced historians for much of the latter part of the 20th century .
More recent historians have noted that the sugar industry was still making large profits at the time of the abolition of the slave trade , and this has led to a renewed interest in Wilberforce and the evangelicals , as well as a recognition of the anti-slavery movement as a prototype for subsequent humanitarian campaigns .
Memorials see caption The Wilberforce Monument in the grounds of Hull College , Hull , erected in 1834 Wilberforce 's life and work have been commemorated in the United Kingdom and elsewhere .
In Westminster Abbey , a seated statue of Wilberforce by Samuel Joseph was erected in 1840 , bearing an epitaph praising his Christian character and his long labour to abolish the slave trade and slavery .
In Wilberforce 's hometown of Hull , a public subscription in 1834 funded the Wilberforce Monument , a 31-metre ( 102 ft )
Greek Doric column topped by a statue of Wilberforce , which stands in the grounds of Hull College near Queen 's Gardens .
Wilberforce Memorial School for the Blind in York was established in 1833 in his honour .
Wilberforce 's birthplace was acquired by the city corporation in 1903 and , following renovation , Wilberforce House in Hull was opened as Britain 's first slavery museum .
In 2006 , the University of Hull established the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation in a building beside Wilberforce House .
Various churches within the Anglican Communion commemorate Wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and Wilberforce University in Ohio , United States , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
The university was the first owned by African-American people , and is an historically black college .
In Ontario , Canada , the Wilberforce Colony was founded by black reformers , and inhabited by freed slaves from the United States .
In media *
Amazing Grace , a film about Wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
*
In 2007 , Focus on the Family produced an audio drama called Grace Victorious : The Story of William Wilberforce , starring Chris Larkin as Wilberforce .
Works * Wilberforce , William ( 1797 ) .
A Practical View of the Prevailing Religious
System of Professed Christians , in the Middle and Higher Classes in this Country , Contrasted with Real Christianity .
London : T. Caddell .
* Wilberforce , William ( 1807 ) .
A Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade , Addressed to the Freeholders of Yorkshire .
London : T. Cadell and W.
Davies , J. Hatchard .
Wilberforce , William ( 1823 ) .
An Appeal to the Religion , Justice , and Humanity of the Inhabitants of the British Empire in behalf of the Negro slaves in the West Indies .
London : J.
Hatchard and Son .


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english politician [PERSON] and abolitionist [PERSON] ( 1759-1833 ) for his eldest son [PERSON] , a lawyer [PERSON] and member [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , see william wilberforce [PERSON] ( 1798-1879 ) . william wilberforce [PERSON] portrait [PERSON] by karl anton hickel [PERSON] , c. 1794 member [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] in office [PLACE] 31 october [PERIOD] 1780 - february [PERIOD] 1825 preceded by david hartley [PERSON] succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston [PERSON] upon hull [PLACE] ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire [PLACE] ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber [UNKNOWN] ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born [PERSON] ( 1759-08-24) 24 august [PERIOD] 1759 kingston [PERSON] upon hull [PLACE] , yorkshire [PLACE] , england [PLACE] died 29 july [PERIOD] 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia [PLACE] , london [PLACE] , england [PLACE] resting place [PLACE] westminster abbey [PERSON] political party [FORCE] independent [PERSON] spouse barbara [STATE] spooner ​ ( m. 1797 ) children [PERSON] 6 , including robert [PERSON] , samuel [PERSON] and henry alma mater st john [PERSON] [PERSON] 's college [INSTITUTION] , cambridge signature venerated [PERSON] in anglicanism feast 30 july [PERIOD] william wilberforce [PERSON] ( 24 august [PERIOD] 1759 - 29 july [PERIOD] 1833 ) was a british [UNKNOWN] politician [PERSON] , philanthropist [PERSON] , and a leader [PERSON] of the movement [HUMAN GROUP] to abolish the atlantic [PLACE] slave trade [PERSON] . a native [ARTIFACT] of kingston [PERSON] upon hull [PLACE] , yorkshire [PLACE] , he began his political career [QUANTITY] in 1780 , and became an independent [PERSON] member [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] ( mp ) for yorkshire [PLACE] ( 1784-1812 ) . in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience [EFFECT] and became an evangelical anglican [UNKNOWN] , which resulted in major changes [UNKNOWN] to his lifestyle [PARTICLE] and a lifelong concern [PERSON] for reform [AMOUNT] . in 1787 , wilberforce [PERSON] came into contact [QUANTITY] with thomas clarkson [PERSON] and a group [GROUP] of activists [PERSON] against the transatlantic slave trade [PERSON] , including granville sharp [PERSON] , hannah more [PERSON] and charles middleton [PERSON] . they persuaded wilberforce [PERSON] to take on the cause [CAUSE] of abolition [EVENT] , and he became a leading english abolitionist [PERSON] . he headed the parliamentary campaign [SERIES] against the british [UNKNOWN] slave trade [PERSON] for 20 years [PERIOD] until the passage [ACT] of the slave trade [PERSON] act [ACT] 1807 . wilberforce [PERSON] was convinced of the importance [QUALITY] of religion [UNKNOWN] , morality [EVENT] and education [PROCESS] . he was involved in causes [CAUSE] and campaigns [SERIES] such as the society [INSTITUTION] for the suppression [ACT] of vice [PERSON] , british missionary work [ACTIVITY] in india [PLACE] , the creation [ACT] of a free colony [SEQUENCE] in sierra leone [PLACE] , the foundation [EVENT] of the church mission society [INSTITUTION] and the society [INSTITUTION] for the prevention [ASSET] of cruelty [STATE] to animals [ANIMAL] . his underlying conservatism [ATTITUDE] led him to support [ACT] politically and socially repressive legislation [ACT] , and resulted in criticism [ACT] that he was ignoring injustices [STATE] at home [PLACE] while [MEASURE] campaigning [ACTIVITY] for the enslaved abroad [LAND] . wilberforce [PERSON] played a central role [ROLE] in the campaign [SERIES] for the complete abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] and continued his involvement [ACT] after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament [HUMAN GROUP] because of health issues [EVENT] . that campaign [SERIES] led to the slavery abolition [EVENT] act [ACT] 1833 , which abolished slavery [INSTITUTION] in most of the british empire [STATE] . wilberforce [PERSON] died just three days [PERIOD] after hearing that the passage [ACT] of the act [ACT] through parliament [HUMAN GROUP] was assured . he was buried in westminster [PERSON] abbey , close to his friend william pitt [PERSON] [PERSON] the younger [PERSON] . early life [EVENT] and education wilberforce [PERSON] was born in hull [PLACE] , in yorkshire [PLACE] , england [PLACE] , on 24 august [PERIOD] 1759 . he was the only son [PERSON] of robert wilberforce [PERSON] ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant [PERSON] , and his wife [PERSON] , elizabeth bird [BIRD] ( 1730-1798 ) . his grandfather [PERSON] , william [PERSON] ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune [PERSON] in the maritime trade [PERSON] with baltic countries [STATE] . he was twice elected mayor [HUMAN ROLE] of hull [PLACE] . wilberforce [PERSON] was a small , sickly and delicate child [PERSON] with poor [UNKNOWN] eyesight [GROUP] . in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school [INSTITUTION] , which at the time [PERIOD] was headed by joseph milner [PERSON] , who would become a lifelong friend [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] profited from the supportive atmosphere [LANGUAGE] at the school [INSTITUTION] , until his father [PERSON] died in 1768 . with his mother [PERSON] struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce [PERSON] was sent to a prosperous uncle [PERSON] and aunt [PERSON] with houses [UNKNOWN] in both st james [PERSON] 's place [PLACE] , london [PLACE] , and wimbledon [PLACE] . he attended an " indifferent " boarding school [INSTITUTION] in putney [PERSON] for two years [PERIOD] and spent his holidays [PERIOD] in wimbledon [PLACE] , where he grew extremely fond of his relatives [PERSON] . he became interested in evangelical christianity [PERSON] due to his relatives [PERSON] ' influence [ELEMENT] , especially that of his aunt hannah [PERSON] , sister [PERSON] of the wealthy merchant john [PERSON] thornton [PERSON] , a philanthropist [PERSON] and a supporter [PERSON] of the leading methodist preacher [PERSON] , george whitefield [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] 's staunchly church [PERSON] of england mother [PERSON] and grandfather [PERSON] , alarmed at these nonconformist [PERSON] influences [UNKNOWN] and at his leanings [UNKNOWN] towards evangelicalism [PERSON] , brought the 12-year-old boy [PERSON] back to hull [PLACE] in 1771 . wilberforce [PERSON] was heartbroken at being separated from his aunt [PERSON] and uncle [PERSON] . his family [HUMAN GROUP] opposed a return [STATEMENT] to hull grammar school [INSTITUTION] because the headmaster [DEVICE] had become a methodist [PERSON] , and wilberforce [PERSON] continued his education [PROCESS] at pocklington school [INSTITUTION] from 1771 to 1776 . influenced by methodist scruples [QUANTITY] , he initially resisted hull [PLACE] 's lively social life [EVENT] , but , as his religious fervour [EMOTION] diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls [BALL] , and played cards [GROUP] . statue [PERSON] on a lawn [PLACE] of a two-storey georgian house [PLACE] a statue [PERSON] of william wilberforce [PERSON] outside wilberforce house [PLACE] , his birthplace [LOCATION] in hull [PLACE] in october [PERIOD] 1776 , at the age [PROPERTY] of seventeen , wilberforce [PERSON] went up to st john [PERSON] 's college [INSTITUTION] , cambridge [PERSON] . the deaths [EVENT] of his grandfather [PERSON] and uncle [PERSON] , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result [RESULT] he had little inclination [MEASURE] or need [UNKNOWN] to apply himself to serious study [STUDY] . instead he immersed himself in the social round [SERIES] of student life [EVENT] and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle [PARTICLE] , enjoying cards [GROUP] , gambling and late-night drinking sessions [PERIOD] - although he found the excesses [AMOUNT] of some of his fellow students [PERSON] distasteful . witty , generous and an excellent conversationalist [PERSON] , wilberforce [PERSON] was a popular figure [FIGURE] . he made many friends [PERSON] , including the more studious future prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] william pitt [PERSON] [PERSON] . despite his lifestyle [PARTICLE] and lack [UNKNOWN] of interest [PERSON] in studying , he managed to pass his examinations [PERIOD] and was awarded a bachelor [PERSON] of arts degree [EVENT] in 1781 and a master [PERSON] of arts degree [EVENT] in 1788 . early parliamentary career [QUANTITY] wilberforce [PERSON] began to consider a political career [QUANTITY] while [MEASURE] still at university [INSTITUTION] and during the winter [PERSON] of 1779-1780 , he and pitt [PERSON] frequently watched house [PLACE] of commons debates [STATE] from the gallery [GOVERNMENT] . pitt [PERSON] , already set on a political career [QUANTITY] , encouraged wilberforce [PERSON] to join him in obtaining a parliamentary seat [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . in september [PERIOD] 1780 , at the age [PROPERTY] of 21 and while [MEASURE] still a student [PERSON] , wilberforce [PERSON] was elected member [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] for kingston [PERSON] upon hull [PLACE] , spending over £8,000 , as was the custom [PERSON] of the time [PERIOD] , to ensure he received the necessary votes [ACT] . free from financial pressures [OCCURRENCE] , wilberforce [PERSON] sat as an independent [PERSON] , resolving to be " no party man [PERSON] " . criticised at times [UNKNOWN] for inconsistency [QUALITY] , he supported both tory [PERSON] and whig governments [GOVERNMENT] according to his conscience [STATE] , working closely with the party [FORCE] in power [POWER] , and voting on specific measures [MEASURE] according to their merits [QUANTITY] . wilberforce [PERSON] attended parliament [HUMAN GROUP] regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life [EVENT] , becoming an habitué [UNKNOWN] of gentlemen [PERSON] 's gambling clubs [GROUP] such as goostree [PERSON] 's and boodle [MONEY] 's in pall mall [PERSON] , london [PLACE] . the writer [PERSON] and socialite madame de staël [PERSON] described him as the " wittiest man [PERSON] in england [PLACE] " and , according to georgiana [PERSON] , duchess [EVENT] of devonshire [PERSON] , the prince [PERSON] of wales [PLACE] said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce [PERSON] sing . wilberforce [PERSON] used his speaking voice [EVENT] to great effect [EFFECT] in political speeches [SPEECH] ; the diarist [PERSON] and author james boswell [PERSON] witnessed wilberforce [PERSON] 's eloquence [QUALITY] in the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount [PLACE] upon the table [DRUG] ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp [PERSON] became a whale [PERSON] . " during the frequent government changes [UNKNOWN] of 1781-1784 , wilberforce [PERSON] supported his friend pitt [PERSON] in parliamentary debates [STATE] . in autumn [PERSON] 1783 , pitt [PERSON] , wilberforce [PERSON] and edward [PLACE] eliot travelled to france [PLACE] for a six-week holiday together . after a difficult start [UNKNOWN] in rheims [PLACE] , where their presence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] aroused police suspicion [AMOUNT] that they were english spies [RESOURCE] , they visited paris [PLACE] , meeting [ACTIVITY] benjamin franklin [PERSON] , general lafayette [PERSON] , marie antoinette [UNKNOWN] and louis xvi [PERSON] , and joined the french [PLACE] court [PERSON] at fontainebleau [PLACE] . pitt [PERSON] became prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] in december [PERIOD] 1783 , with wilberforce [PERSON] a key supporter [PERSON] of his minority government [GOVERNMENT] . despite their close friendship [RELATIONSHIP] , there is no record [ARTIFACT] that pitt [PERSON] offered wilberforce [PERSON] a ministerial position [POSITION] in this or future governments [GOVERNMENT] . this may [PERIOD] have been due to wilberforce [PERSON] 's wish [PERSON] to remain an independent [PERSON] mp. alternatively , wilberforce [PERSON] 's frequent tardiness [RESULT] and disorganisation [UNKNOWN] , as well as his chronic eye problems [PERSON] that at times [UNKNOWN] made reading [PROPERTY] impossible , may [PERIOD] have convinced pitt [PERSON] that he was not ministerial material [MATERIAL] . when parliament [HUMAN GROUP] was dissolved in the spring [PERSON] of 1784 , wilberforce [PERSON] decided to stand as a candidate [AMOUNT] for the county [PLACE] of yorkshire [PLACE] in the 1784 general election [PERSON] . on 6 april [PERIOD] , he was returned as mp for yorkshire [PLACE] at the age [PROPERTY] of twenty-four . conversion [SPEECH ACT] in october [PERIOD] 1784 , wilberforce [PERSON] embarked upon a tour [EVENT] of europe [PLACE] with his mother [PERSON] , sister [PERSON] and isaac milner [PERSON] , the younger [PERSON] brother [PERSON] of his former headmaster [DEVICE] . they visited the french riviera [PLACE] and had dinners [FOOD] , played cards [GROUP] , and gambled . in february [PERIOD] 1785 , wilberforce [PERSON] returned to london [PLACE] temporarily , to support [ACT] pitt [PERSON] 's proposals [ABSTRACT ENTITY] for parliamentary reforms [AMOUNT] . he rejoined the party [FORCE] in genoa [PLACE] , italy [PLACE] , and they continued their tour [EVENT] to switzerland [PLACE] . milner [PERSON] accompanied wilberforce [PERSON] to england [PLACE] , and on the journey [PERSON] they read " the rise [PERSON] and progress [EVENT] of religion [UNKNOWN] in the soul [PERSON] " by philip doddridge [PERSON] , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist [PERSON] . an oil-on-canvas portrait [PERSON] of wilberforce [PERSON] holding a pen [PLACE] . william wilberforce [PERSON] by john [PERSON] rising , 1790 , pictured at the age [PROPERTY] of 30 wilberforce [PERSON] 's spiritual journey [PERSON] is thought to have changed course [PERSON] at this time [PERIOD] . he started to rise [PERSON] early to read the bible [PERSON] and pray and kept a private journal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . he underwent an evangelical conversion [SPEECH ACT] , regretting his past life [EVENT] and resolving to commit his future life [EVENT] and work [ACTIVITY] to the service [INSTITUTION] of god [PERSON] . his conversion [SPEECH ACT] changed some of his habits [ACTION] , but not his nature [NATURE] : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others [UNKNOWN] towards his new faith [PERSON] . inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality [INSTANCE] , use [USE] of time [PERIOD] , vanity [ENTITY] , self-control and relationships [RELATIONSHIP] with others [UNKNOWN] . at the time [PERIOD] , religious enthusiasm [CONDITION] was generally regarded as a social transgression [PERSON] and was stigmatised in polite society [INSTITUTION] . evangelicals [PERSON] in the upper classes [PERSON] were exposed to contempt [PERSON] and ridicule [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , and wilberforce [PERSON] 's conversion [SPEECH ACT] led him to question whether he should remain in public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] . he sought guidance [SPEECH ACT] from john newton [PERSON] , a leading evangelical anglican [UNKNOWN] clergyman [DEVICE] of the day [PERIOD] and rector [PERSON] of st mary woolnoth [PLACE] . both counselled him to remain in politics [ACTION] , and he resolved to do so " with increased diligence [STATE] and conscientiousness [STATE] " . his political views [GROUP] were informed by his faith [PERSON] and by his desire [PERSON] to promote christianity [PERSON] and christian ethics [SET] in private and public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] . his views [GROUP] were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes [UNKNOWN] in a god-given political and social order [PERSON] , and focused on issues [EVENT] such as the observance [FORM] of the sabbath [PERSON] and the eradication [ACT] of immorality [ACT] through education [PROCESS] and reform [AMOUNT] . he was often distrusted by progressive voices [EVENT] because of his conservatism [ATTITUDE] , and regarded with suspicion [AMOUNT] by many tories [UNKNOWN] who saw evangelicals [PERSON] as radicals [PERSON] who wanted the overthrow [PROCESS] of church [PERSON] and state [STATE] . in 1786 , wilberforce [PERSON] leased a house [PLACE] in old palace yard [PERSON] , westminster [PERSON] , in order [PERSON] to be near parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . he began using his parliamentary position [POSITION] to advocate reform [AMOUNT] by introducing a registration bill [PERSON] , proposing limited changes [UNKNOWN] to parliamentary election procedures [PROCEDURE] . in response [RANK] to the need [UNKNOWN] for bodies [BODY] for dissection [PROCESS] by surgeons [PERSON] , he brought forward a bill [PERSON] to extend the measure [MEASURE] permitting the dissection [PROCESS] after execution [CONDITION] of criminals [PERSON] such as rapists [PERSON] , arsonists [PERSON] , burglars [PERSON] and violent robbers [PERSON] . the bill [PERSON] also advocated the reduction [UNKNOWN] of sentences [PERSON] for women [PERSON] convicted of treason [EVENT] , a crime [EVENT] that at the time [PERIOD] included a husband [PERSON] 's murder [ACT] . the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] passed both bills [DOCUMENT] , but they were defeated in the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] . abolition [EVENT] of the transatlantic slave trade [PERSON] initial decision [DECISION] the british [UNKNOWN] initially became involved in the slave trade [PERSON] during the 16th century [PERIOD] . by 1783 , the triangular route [ROUTE] that took british-made goods to africa [PLACE] to buy slaves [PERSON] , transported the enslaved to the west indies [PLACE] , and then brought slave-grown products [RESULT] such as sugar [SUGAR] , tobacco , and cotton [ENTITY] to britain [PLACE] , represented about 80 percent [AMOUNT] of great britain [PLACE] 's foreign income [DISEASE] . british ships [SHIP] dominated the slave trade [PERSON] , supplying french [PLACE] , spanish [PLACE] , dutch [PERSON] , portuguese [UNKNOWN] and british colonies [SEQUENCE] , and in peak years [PERIOD] carried forty thousand enslaved men [PERSON] , women [PERSON] and children [PERSON] across the atlantic [PLACE] in the horrific conditions [CONDITION] of the middle [PERSON] passage [ACT] . of the estimated 11 million africans [PERSON] transported into slavery [INSTITUTION] , about 1.4 million died during the voyage [ACT] . the british campaign [SERIES] to abolish the slave trade [PERSON] is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment [INSTITUTION] of the quakers [UNKNOWN] ' anti-slavery committees [PERSON] , and their presentation [PERSON] to parliament [HUMAN GROUP] of the first slave [PERSON] trade petition [ACT] in 1783 . the same year [PERIOD] , wilberforce [PERSON] , while [MEASURE] dining with his cambridge friend [PERSON] gerard edwards [PERSON] , met rev. james ramsay [PERSON] , a ship [SHIP] 's surgeon [PERSON] who had become a clergyman [DEVICE] and medical supervisor [UNKNOWN] on the island [PLACE] of st christopher [PLACE] ( later st kitts [PLACE] ) . ramsay [PERSON] was horrified by the conditions [CONDITION] endured by the enslaved peoples [PERSON] , both at sea [PLACE] and on the plantations [QUANTITY] and returned to england [PLACE] and joined abolitionist [PERSON] movements [UNKNOWN] . wilberforce [PERSON] did not follow up on his meeting [ACTIVITY] with ramsay [PERSON] , but three years [PERIOD] later , inspired by his new faith [PERSON] , wilberforce [PERSON] became interested in humanitarian reform [AMOUNT] . in november [PERIOD] 1786 , he received a letter [ABILITY] from sir charles middleton [PERSON] [PERSON] that re-opened his interest [PERSON] in the slave trade [PERSON] . middleton [PERSON] suggested that wilberforce [PERSON] bring forward the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . wilberforce [PERSON] responded that he " felt the great importance [QUALITY] of the subject [EVENT] , and thought himself unequal to the task [PROCESS] allotted to him , but yet would not positively decline [ACT] it " . he began to read widely on the subject [EVENT] and met with a group [GROUP] of abolitionists [PERSON] called the testonites [UNKNOWN] at middleton [PERSON] 's home [PLACE] in the early winter [PERSON] of 1786-1787 . see caption diagram [PLAN] of a slave [PERSON] ship [SHIP] , the brookes [PERSON] , illustrating how slaves [PERSON] were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson [PERSON] met with wilberforce [PERSON] for the first time [PERIOD] at old palace yard [PERSON] and brought a copy [PERSON] of his essay [PERSON] on the subject [EVENT] . clarkson [PERSON] visited wilberforce [PERSON] weekly , bringing first-hand evidence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] he had obtained about the slave trade [PERSON] . the quakers [UNKNOWN] , already working for abolition [EVENT] , recognised the need [UNKNOWN] for influence [ELEMENT] within parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , and urged clarkson [PERSON] to secure a commitment [COMMITMENT] from wilberforce [PERSON] to bring forward the case [STUDY] for abolition [EVENT] in the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] . it was arranged that bennet langton [PERSON] , a lincolnshire landowner [PERSON] and mutual acquaintance [WORD] of wilberforce [PERSON] and clarkson [PERSON] , would organise a dinner party [FORCE] on 13 march [PERIOD] 1787 to ask wilberforce [PERSON] formally to lead the parliamentary campaign [SERIES] . by the end [UNKNOWN] of the evening [PERIOD] , wilberforce [PERSON] had agreed in general terms [TERM] that he would bring forward the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , " provided that no person [PERSON] more proper could be found " . the same spring [PERSON] , on 12 may [PERIOD] 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce [PERSON] held a conversation [ACTION] with william pitt [PERSON] and the future prime minister william [PERSON] grenville [PERSON] as they sat under a large oak tree [TREE] on pitt [PERSON] 's estate [ESTATE] in kent [PLACE] . under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak [PERSON] " at holwood house [PLACE] , pitt [PERSON] challenged his friend [PERSON] to give notice [ACT] of a motion [ACTION] concerning the slave trade [PERSON] before another parliamentarian [UNKNOWN] did . wilberforce [PERSON] 's response [RANK] is not recorded , but he later declared this was when he decided to bring forward the motion [ACTION] . early parliamentary action wilberforce [PERSON] had planned to introduce a motion [ACTION] giving notice [ACT] that he would bring forward a bill [PERSON] for the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] during the 1789 parliamentary session [PERIOD] . however , in january [PERIOD] 1788 , he was taken ill [PERSON] with a probable stress-related condition [CONDITION] , now thought to be ulcerative colitis [UNKNOWN] . it was several months [PERIOD] before he was able to resume work [ACTIVITY] , and he spent time [PERIOD] convalescing at bath [PLACE] and cambridge [PERSON] . his regular bouts [PERIOD] of gastrointestinal illnesses [ILLNESS] precipitated the use [USE] of moderate quantities [QUANTITY] of opium [SUBSTANCE] , which proved effective in alleviating his condition [CONDITION] , and which he continued to use [USE] for the rest [NUMBER] of his life [EVENT] . in wilberforce [PERSON] 's absence [ABSENCE] , pitt [PERSON] , who had long been supportive of abolition [EVENT] , introduced the preparatory motion [ACTION] himself , and ordered a privy council investigation [INVESTIGATION] into the slave trade [PERSON] , followed by a house [PLACE] of commons review [ACT] . a black man [PERSON] with shackles [ABSTRACT ENTITY] around their wrists [GROUP] and ankles [POSITION] is kneeling to the right [UNKNOWN] . an inscription [STYLE] at the bottom reads [EMOTION] " " am i not a man [PERSON] and a brother [PERSON] ? " " am i not a man [PERSON] and a brother [PERSON] ? " medallion [EVENT] created as part of anti-slavery campaign [SERIES] by josiah wedgwood [PERSON] , 1787 with the publication [ACTION] of the privy council report [PERSON] in april [PERIOD] 1789 and following months [PERIOD] of planning [PLAN] , wilberforce [PERSON] commenced his parliamentary campaign [SERIES] . on 12 may [PERIOD] 1789 , he made his first major speech [SPEECH] on the subject [EVENT] of abolition [EVENT] in the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] , in which he reasoned that the trade [PERSON] was morally reprehensible and an issue [EVENT] of natural justice [PROPERTY] . drawing on thomas clarkson [PERSON] 's mass [QUANTITY] of evidence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , he described in detail [EVENT] the appalling conditions [CONDITION] in which enslaved people [HUMAN GROUP] travelled from africa [PLACE] in the middle [PERSON] passage [ACT] and argued that abolishing the trade [PERSON] would also bring an improvement [AGREEMENT] to the conditions [CONDITION] of existing slaves [PERSON] in the west indies [PLACE] . he moved twelve resolutions [DISTANCE] condemning the slave trade [PERSON] , but did not refer to the abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] itself [UNKNOWN] , instead dwelling on the potential [SET] for reproduction [RESULT] in the existing slave population [PERSON] should the trade [PERSON] be abolished . with several parliamentarians [UNKNOWN] signalling support [ACT] for the bill [PERSON] , the opponents [PERSON] of abolition [EVENT] delayed the vote [PERSON] by proposing that the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] hear its own evidence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] ; wilberforce [PERSON] , in a decision [DECISION] that has been criticised for prolonging the slave trade [PERSON] , reluctantly agreed . the hearings [UNKNOWN] were not completed by the end [UNKNOWN] of the parliamentary session [PERIOD] and were deferred until the following year [PERIOD] . in the meantime [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , wilberforce [PERSON] and clarkson [PERSON] tried unsuccessfully to take advantage [CONDITION] of the egalitarian atmosphere [LANGUAGE] of the french revolution [STUDY] to press for france [PLACE] 's abolition [EVENT] of the trade [PERSON] . in january [PERIOD] 1790 , wilberforce [PERSON] succeeded in speeding up the hearings [UNKNOWN] by gaining approval for a smaller parliamentary select committee [HUMAN GROUP] to consider the vast quantity [QUANTITY] of evidence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] which had been accumulated . wilberforce [PERSON] 's house [PLACE] in old palace yard [PERSON] became a centre [UNKNOWN] for the abolitionists [PERSON] ' campaign [SERIES] and the location [LOCATION] for many strategy meetings [ACTIVITY] . petitioners [PERSON] for other causes [CAUSE] also besieged him there . let us not despair ; it is a blessed cause [CAUSE] , and success [ACT] , ere long , will crown our exertions [AMOUNT] . already we have gained one victory [PERSON] ; we have obtained , for these poor [UNKNOWN] creatures [ANIMAL] , the recognition [STATE] of their human nature [NATURE] , which , for a while [MEASURE] was most shamefully denied . this is the first fruits [EVENT] of our efforts [ACTION] ; let us persevere [UNKNOWN] and our triumph [ABSTRACT ENTITY] will be complete . never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal [PERSON] from the christian name [NAME] , released ourselves from the load [PERSON] of guilt [ACT] , under which we at present labour [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , and extinguished every trace [PERSON] of this bloody traffic [QUANTITY] , of which our posterity [WORD] , looking back to the history [UNIT] of these enlightened times [UNKNOWN] , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace [CONDITION] and dishonour [DEFICIENCY] to this country [PLACE] . william wilberforce [PERSON] speech [SPEECH] before the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] , 18 april [PERIOD] 1791 interrupted by a general election [PERSON] in june [PERIOD] 1790 , the committee [HUMAN GROUP] finished hearing witnesses [PERSON] and in april [PERIOD] 1791 , with a closely reasoned four-hour speech [SPEECH] , wilberforce [PERSON] introduced the first parliamentary bill [PERSON] to abolish the slave trade [PERSON] . after two evenings [UNKNOWN] of debate [STATE] , the bill [PERSON] was easily defeated by 163 votes [ACT] to 88 , as the political climate [STUDY] having swung [UNKNOWN] in a conservative direction [DIRECTION] after the french revolution [STUDY] and in reaction [PERSON] to an increase [INCREASE] in radicalism [PERSON] and to slave [PERSON] revolts [ACT] in the french west indies [PLACE] . a protracted parliamentary campaign [SERIES] to abolish slavery [INSTITUTION] continued , and wilberforce [PERSON] remained committed to this cause [CAUSE] despite frustration [PERSON] and hostility [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . he was supported by fellow members [PERSON] of the clapham sect [GROUP] , among whom was his best friend [PERSON] and cousin henry thornton [PERSON] [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] accepted an invitation [SPEECH ACT] to share a house [PLACE] with henry thornton [PERSON] in 1792 , moving into his own home [PLACE] after thornton [PERSON] 's marriage [EVENT] in 1796 . wilberforce [PERSON] , the clapham sect [GROUP] and others [UNKNOWN] were anxious to demonstrate that africans [PERSON] , and particularly freed slaves [PERSON] , had human and economic abilities [ABILITY] beyond the slave trade [PERSON] and capable of sustaining a well-ordered society [INSTITUTION] , trade [PERSON] and cultivation [ACT] . inspired in part by the utopian vision [UNKNOWN] of granville sharp [PERSON] , they became involved in the establishment [INSTITUTION] in 1792 of a free colony [SEQUENCE] in sierra leone [PLACE] with black settlers [PERSON] from britain [PLACE] , nova scotia [PERSON] and jamaica [PLACE] , as well as native [ARTIFACT] africans [PERSON] and some whites [UNKNOWN] . they formed the sierra leone company [INSTITUTION] , with wilberforce [PERSON] subscribing liberally to the project [ACTION] in money [MONEY] and time [PERIOD] . on 2 april [PERIOD] 1792 , wilberforce [PERSON] brought another bill [PERSON] calling [PERSON] for abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] . henry dundas [PERSON] , as home secretary [PERSON] , proposed a compromise solution [OCCURRENCE] of gradual abolition [EVENT] of the trade [PERSON] over several years [PERIOD] . this was passed by 230 to 85 votes [ACT] , but wilberforce [PERSON] believed that it was little more than a clever ploy [PERSON] to ensure that total abolition [EVENT] would be delayed indefinitely . war [EVENT] with france [PLACE] on 26 february [PERIOD] 1793 , another vote [PERSON] to abolish the slave trade [PERSON] was narrowly defeated by eight votes [ACT] . the outbreak [OCCURRENCE] of war [EVENT] with france [PLACE] the same month [PERIOD] prevented further consideration [AMOUNT] of the issue [EVENT] , as politicians [PERSON] concentrated on the national crisis [EVENT] and the threat [PERSON] of invasion [GROUP] . the same year [PERIOD] , and again in 1794 , wilberforce [PERSON] unsuccessfully brought before parliament [HUMAN GROUP] a bill [PERSON] to outlaw british ships [SHIP] from supplying enslaved people [HUMAN GROUP] to foreign colonies [SEQUENCE] . he voiced his concern [PERSON] about the war [EVENT] and urged pitt [PERSON] and his government [GOVERNMENT] to make greater efforts [ACTION] to end [UNKNOWN] hostilities [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . growing more alarmed , on 31 december [PERIOD] 1794 , wilberforce [PERSON] moved that the government [GOVERNMENT] seek a peaceful resolution [DISTANCE] with france [PLACE] , a stance [PROPERTY] that created a temporary breach [ACT] in his long friendship [RELATIONSHIP] with pitt [PERSON] . abolition [EVENT] continued to be associated in the public [UNKNOWN] consciousness [STATE] with the french revolution [STUDY] and with british [UNKNOWN] radical groups [GROUP] , resulting in a decline [ACT] in public [UNKNOWN] support [ACT] . despite this , wilberforce [PERSON] continued to introduce abolition bills [DOCUMENT] throughout the 1790s . the early years [PERIOD] of the 19th century [PERIOD] saw an increased public [UNKNOWN] interest [PERSON] in abolition [EVENT] . in june [PERIOD] 1804 , wilberforce [PERSON] 's bill [PERSON] to abolish the slave trade [PERSON] successfully passed all its stages [STAGE] through the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] . however , it was too late in the parliamentary session [PERIOD] for it to complete its passage [ACT] through the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] . on its reintroduction [EVENT] during the 1805 session [PERIOD] , it was defeated , with even the usually sympathetic pitt [PERSON] failing to support [ACT] it . on this occasion [ABSTRACT ENTITY] and throughout the campaign [SERIES] , abolition [EVENT] was held back by wilberforce [PERSON] 's trusting [ACTIVITY] , even credulous nature [NATURE] , and his deferential attitude [ATTITUDE] towards those in power [POWER] . he found it difficult to believe that men [PERSON] of rank [RANK] would not do what he perceived to be the right [UNKNOWN] thing [ENTITY] , and was reluctant to confront them when they did not . final phase [UNKNOWN] of the campaign [SERIES] see caption [CONDITION] the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] in wilberforce [PERSON] 's day [PERIOD] by augustus pugin [PERSON] and thomas rowlandson [PERSON] ( 1808-1811 ) following pitt [PERSON] 's death [EVENT] in january [PERIOD] 1806 , wilberforce [PERSON] increased his collaboration [PERSON] with the whigs [LIQUID] , especially the abolitionists [PERSON] . he gave general support [ACT] to the grenville-fox administration , which brought more abolitionists [PERSON] into the cabinet [PERSON] ; wilberforce [PERSON] and charles fox [PERSON] led the campaign [SERIES] in the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] . a radical change [UNKNOWN] of tactics [SEQUENCE] , which involved the introduction [ACT] of a bill [PERSON] to ban british subjects [EVENT] from aiding or participating in the slave trade [PERSON] to the french [PLACE] colonies [SEQUENCE] , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen [PERSON] . a bill [PERSON] was introduced and approved by the cabinet [PERSON] , and wilberforce [PERSON] and other abolitionists [PERSON] maintained a self-imposed silence [PERSON] , so as not to draw any attention [PERSON] to the effect [EFFECT] of the bill [PERSON] . the approach [PLACE] was successful and the foreign slave trade [PERSON] bill [PERSON] received royal assent [UNKNOWN] on 23 may [PERIOD] 1806 . wilberforce [PERSON] and clarkson [PERSON] collected a large volume [AMOUNT] of evidence [ABSTRACT ENTITY] against the slave trade [PERSON] over the previous two decades [UNKNOWN] , and wilberforce [PERSON] spent the latter part of 1806 writing a letter [ABILITY] on the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] , which was a comprehensive restatement [ACT] of the abolitionists [PERSON] ' case [STUDY] . wilberforce [PERSON] was re-elected as an mp for yorkshire [PLACE] in the 1806 united kingdom [PLACE] general election [PERSON] , after which he returned to finishing and publishing his letter [ABILITY] , a 400-page book [ENTITY] which formed the basis [EVENT] for the final phase [UNKNOWN] of the campaign [SERIES] . lord grenville [PERSON] , the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , successfully introduced an abolition bill [PERSON] in the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] first , then charles grey [PERSON] moved for a second reading [PROPERTY] in the commons [PLACE] on 23 february [PERIOD] 1807 . as tributes [ACT] were made to wilberforce [PERSON] , whose face [PERSON] streamed with tears [PERSON] , the bill [PERSON] was carried by 283 votes [ACT] to 16 . excited supporters [PERSON] suggested taking advantage [CONDITION] of the large majority [PROPERTY] to seek the abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] itself [UNKNOWN] , but wilberforce [PERSON] made it clear that total emancipation [ACT] was not the immediate goal [GOAL] . personal life [EVENT] in his youth [PERIOD] , william wilberforce [PERSON] showed little interest [PERSON] in women [PERSON] , but when he was in his late thirties [SIGN] his friend thomas babington [PERSON] recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner [PERSON] ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential [SET] bride [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] met her two days [PERIOD] later on 15 april [PERIOD] 1797 , and was immediately smitten ; following an eight-day whirlwind romance [PERSON] , he proposed . despite the urgings [ACTIVITY] of friends [PERSON] to slow down , the couple [EVENT] married at the church [PERSON] of st swithin [PLACE] in bath [PLACE] , somerset [PERSON] , on 30 may [PERIOD] 1797 . they were devoted to each other , and barbara [STATE] was very attentive and supportive to wilberforce [PERSON] in his increasing ill [PERSON] health [PROPERTY] , though she showed little interest [PERSON] in his political activities [ACTIVITY] . they had six children [PERSON] in fewer [PERSON] than ten years [PERIOD] : william [PERSON] ( born 1798 ) , barbara [STATE] ( born 1799 ) , elizabeth [PLACE] ( born 1801 ) , robert [PERSON] ( born 1802 ) , samuel [PERSON] ( born 1805 ) and henry [PERSON] ( born 1807 ) . wilberforce [PERSON] was an indulgent [UNKNOWN] and adoring father [PERSON] who revelled in his time [PERIOD] at home [PLACE] and at play [EVENT] with his children [PERSON] . other concerns [PERSON] political and social reform wilberforce [PERSON] was highly conservative on many political and social issues [EVENT] . he advocated change [UNKNOWN] in society [INSTITUTION] through christianity [PERSON] and improvement [AGREEMENT] in morals [ACT] , education [PROCESS] and religion [UNKNOWN] , fearing and opposing radical causes [CAUSE] and revolution [STUDY] . the radical writer william [PERSON] cobbett [PERSON] was among those who attacked what they saw as wilberforce [PERSON] 's hypocrisy [RESOURCE] in campaigning [ACTIVITY] for better working conditions [CONDITION] for enslaved people [HUMAN GROUP] while [MEASURE] british workers [UNKNOWN] lived in terrible conditions [CONDITION] at home [PLACE] . critics [PERSON] noted wilberforce [PERSON] 's support [ACT] of the suspension [PERSON] of habeas corpus [PLACE] in 1795 and his votes [ACT] for pitt [PERSON] 's " gagging bills [DOCUMENT] " , which banned meetings [ACTIVITY] of more than 50 people [HUMAN GROUP] , allowing speakers [PROCESS] to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties [PERSON] on those who attacked the constitution [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] was opposed to giving workers [UNKNOWN] ' rights [UNKNOWN] to organise into unions [STATE] , in 1799 speaking in favour [PERSON] of the combination act [ACT] , which suppressed trade union activity [ACTIVITY] throughout britain [PLACE] , and calling [PERSON] unions [STATE] " a general disease [DISEASE] in our society [INSTITUTION] " . he also opposed an enquiry [UNKNOWN] into the 1819 peterloo massacre [ACT] in which eleven protesters [PERSON] were killed at a political rally demanding reform [AMOUNT] . concerned about " bad men [PERSON] who wished to produce anarchy [QUALITY] and confusion [DEFICIENCY] " , he approved of the government [GOVERNMENT] 's six acts [UNKNOWN] , which further limited public [UNKNOWN] meetings [ACTIVITY] and seditious writings [PROCESS] . wilberforce [PERSON] 's actions [ACTION] led the essayist william [PERSON] hazlitt [PERSON] to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity [PERSON] to untutored savages [PERSON] , and tolerates its worst abuses [ACT] in civilised states [PLACE] . " an unfinished oil portrait [PERSON] of wilberforce [PERSON] . the face [PERSON] and shoulders [PERIOD] are painted , while [MEASURE] the rest [NUMBER] of the portrait [PERSON] contains a sketched outline [PLAN] . unfinished portrait [PERSON] by sir thomas lawrence [PERSON] , 1828 wilberforce [PERSON] 's views [GROUP] of women [PERSON] and religion [UNKNOWN] were also conservative . he disapproved of women [PERSON] anti-slavery activists [PERSON] such as elizabeth heyrick [PERSON] , who organised women [PERSON] 's abolitionist [PERSON] groups [GROUP] in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies [GOVERNMENT] to meet , to publish , to go from house [PLACE] to house [PLACE] stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings [MEASURE] unsuited to the female character [EVENT] as delineated in scripture [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . " wilberforce [PERSON] initially strongly opposed bills [DOCUMENT] for catholic emancipation [ACT] , which would have allowed catholics [UNKNOWN] to become mps [UNKNOWN] , hold public [UNKNOWN] office [PLACE] and serve in the army [HUMAN GROUP] , although by 1813 , he had changed his views [GROUP] and spoke in favour [PERSON] of a similar bill [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] advocated legislation [ACT] to improve the working conditions [CONDITION] for chimney-sweeps and textile workers [UNKNOWN] , engaged in prison reform [AMOUNT] , and supported campaigns [SERIES] to restrict capital punishment [PLACE] and the severe punishments [PERSON] meted out under the game laws [ACT] . he recognised the importance [QUALITY] of education [PROCESS] in alleviating poverty [QUALITY] , and when hannah more [PERSON] and her sister [PERSON] established sunday schools [PERSON] for the poor [UNKNOWN] in somerset [PERSON] and the mendips [UNKNOWN] , he provided financial and moral support [ACT] as they faced opposition [EVENT] from landowners [PERSON] and anglican clergy [PERSON] . from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce [PERSON] campaigned for limited parliamentary reform [AMOUNT] , such as the abolition [EVENT] of rotten boroughs [ESTATE] and the redistribution [PROCESS] of commons seats [ABSTRACT ENTITY] to growing towns [ENTITY] and cities [SET] , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures [MEASURE] went too far . with others [UNKNOWN] , wilberforce [PERSON] founded the world [PLACE] 's first animal welfare organisation [ORGANISATION] , the society [INSTITUTION] for the prevention [ASSET] of cruelty [STATE] to animals [ANIMAL] ( later the royal society [INSTITUTION] for the prevention [ASSET] of cruelty [STATE] to animals [ANIMAL] ) . he was also opposed to duelling [UNKNOWN] , which he described as the " disgrace [CONDITION] of a christian society [INSTITUTION] " and was appalled when his friend pitt [PERSON] engaged in a duel [PERSON] with george tierney [PERSON] in 1798 , particularly as it occurred on a sunday [PERIOD] , the christian day [PERIOD] of rest [NUMBER] . wilberforce [PERSON] was generous with his time [PERIOD] and money [MONEY] , believing that those with wealth [COLLECTION] had a duty [ATTITUDE] to give a significant portion [PORTION] of their income [DISEASE] to the needy [PERSON] . yearly , he gave away thousands [UNKNOWN] of pounds [UNIT] , much of it to clergymen [DEVICE] to distribute in their parishes [PLACE] . he paid off the debts [MONEY] of others [UNKNOWN] , supported education [PROCESS] and missions [STATE] , and in a year [PERIOD] of food shortages [DEFICIENCY] , gave to charity [PERSON] more than his own yearly income [DISEASE] . he was exceptionally hospitable , and could not bear to sack any of his servants [PERSON] . as a result [RESULT] , his home [PLACE] was full of old and incompetent servants [PERSON] kept on in charity [PERSON] . although he was often months [PERIOD] behind in his correspondence [SIMILARITY] , wilberforce [PERSON] responded to numerous requests [REQUEST] for advice [COGNITIVE STATE] or for help [UNKNOWN] in obtaining professorships [UNKNOWN] , military promotions [RESULT] and livings [PERSON] for clergymen [DEVICE] , or for the reprieve [ACT] of death sentences [PERSON] . evangelical christianity [PERSON] a supporter [PERSON] of the evangelical wing [PERSON] of the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] , wilberforce [PERSON] believed that the revitalisation [UNKNOWN] of the church [PERSON] and individual christian observance [FORM] would lead to a harmonious , moral society [INSTITUTION] . he sought to elevate the status [STATUS] of religion [UNKNOWN] in public [UNKNOWN] and private life [EVENT] , making piety [PERSON] fashionable in both the upper- and middle-classes of society [INSTITUTION] . to this end [UNKNOWN] , in april [PERIOD] 1797 , wilberforce [PERSON] published a practical view [GROUP] of the prevailing religious system [SYSTEM] of professed christians [PERSON] in the higher [UNKNOWN] and middle classes [PERSON] of this country [PLACE] contrasted with real christianity [PERSON] [PERSON] , on which he had been working since 1793 . this was an exposition [AGREEMENT] of new testament doctrine [PLACE] and teachings [ACT] and a call [UNKNOWN] for a revival [PERSON] of christianity [PERSON] , as a response [RANK] to the moral decline [ACT] of the nation [PERSON] , illustrating his own testimony [PERSON] and the views [GROUP] which inspired him . the book [ENTITY] was influential and a best-seller ; 7,500 copies [PERSON] were sold within six months [PERIOD] , and it was translated into several languages [LANGUAGE] . wilberforce [PERSON] fostered and supported missionary activity [ACTIVITY] in britain [PLACE] and abroad [LAND] , and was involved with other members [PERSON] of the clapham sect [GROUP] in various evangelical and charitable organisations [ORGANISATION] . he was a founding member [PERSON] of the church missionary society [INSTITUTION] ( since renamed the church mission society [INSTITUTION] ) and an early vice-president of the london society [INSTITUTION] for promoting christianity [PERSON] among the jews [PERSON] ( later the church [PERSON] 's ministry among jewish people [HUMAN GROUP] ) . horrified by the lack [UNKNOWN] of christian evangelism [PROCESS] in india [PLACE] , wilberforce [PERSON] used the 1793 renewal [ACT] of the british east india [PLACE] company [INSTITUTION] [INSTITUTION] 's charter [PERSON] to propose the addition [PERSON] of clauses [SET] requiring the company [INSTITUTION] to provide teachers [PERSON] and chaplains [UNKNOWN] and to commit to the " religious improvement [AGREEMENT] " of indians [UNKNOWN] . the plan [PLAN] was unsuccessful due to lobbying by the directors [PERSON] of the company [INSTITUTION] , who feared that their commercial interests [PERSON] would be damaged . wilberforce [PERSON] tried again in 1813 when the charter [PERSON] next came up for renewal [ACT] . using petitions [ACT] , meetings [ACTIVITY] , lobbying and letter [ABILITY] writing , he successfully campaigned for changes [UNKNOWN] to the charter [PERSON] . speaking in favour [PERSON] of the charter act [ACT] 1813 , he criticised the east india [PLACE] company [INSTITUTION] and their rule [RULE] in india [PLACE] for its hypocrisy [RESOURCE] and racial prejudice [PERSON] , while [MEASURE] also condemning aspects [PERSON] of hinduism [CONCEPT] including the caste system [SYSTEM] , infanticide , polygamy [CONDITION] and sati [PERSON] . moral reform [AMOUNT] greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy [UNKNOWN] of british [UNKNOWN] society [INSTITUTION] , wilberforce [PERSON] was active in matters [PERSON] of moral reform [AMOUNT] , lobbying against " the torrent [EVENT] of profaneness [PROPERTY] that every day [PERIOD] makes more rapid advances [UNKNOWN] " , and considered this issue [EVENT] and the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] as equally important goals [GOAL] . at the suggestion [SUGGESTION] of wilberforce [PERSON] and bishop porteus [PERSON] , king george iii [PERSON] was requested by the archbishop [PERSON] of canterbury [PLACE] to issue [EVENT] in 1787 a proclamation [STATEMENT] for the encouragement [WORD] of piety [PERSON] and virtue [PERSON] , as a remedy [STUDY] for the rising tide [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of immorality [ACT] . the proclamation [STATEMENT] commanded the prosecution [INSTITUTION] of those guilty [DECISION] of " excessive drinking [ACT] , blasphemy [ACT] , profane [PERSON] swearing and cursing , lewdness [PROPERTY] , profanation [UNKNOWN] of the lord [PERSON] 's day [PERIOD] , and other dissolute [UNKNOWN] , immoral , or disorderly practices " . greeted largely with public [UNKNOWN] indifference [DEFICIENCY] , wilberforce [PERSON] sought to increase [INCREASE] its impact [ACTION] by mobilising public [UNKNOWN] figures [FIGURE] to the cause [CAUSE] , and by founding the society [INSTITUTION] for the suppression [ACT] of vice [PERSON] . this and other societies [UNKNOWN] in which wilberforce [PERSON] was a prime [PERSON] mover , mustered support [ACT] for the prosecution [INSTITUTION] of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws [ACT] , including brothel keepers [PERSON] , distributors [PERSON] of pornographic material [MATERIAL] , and those who did not respect [EVENT] the sabbath [PERSON] . the writer [PERSON] and clergyman sydney smith [PERSON] criticised wilberforce [PERSON] for being more interested in the sins [STUDY] of the poor [UNKNOWN] than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name [NAME] would be the " society [INSTITUTION] for suppressing the vices [EVENT] of persons [PERSON] whose income [DISEASE] does not exceed £500 per annum [TIME PERIOD] " . wilberforce [PERSON] 's attempts [ACTION] to legislate against adultery [PERSON] and sunday newspapers [PERSON] were also in vain [PERSON] ; his involvement [ACT] and leadership [PERSON] in other , less punitive , approaches [PLACE] were more successful in the long-term , however . by the end [UNKNOWN] of his life [EVENT] , british [UNKNOWN] morals [ACT] , manners [PERSON] , and sense [UNKNOWN] of social responsibility [RESPONSIBILITY] had increased , paving the way [UNKNOWN] for future changes [UNKNOWN] in societal conventions [ACT] and attitudes [ATTITUDE] during the victorian era [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . emancipation [ACT] of enslaved africans wilberforce [PERSON] worked with the members [PERSON] of the african institution [INSTITUTION] to ensure the enforcement [CONDITION] of the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] and to promote abolitionist [PERSON] negotiations [PROCESS] with other countries [STATE] . in particular , the united states [PLACE] had abolished the slave trade [PERSON] after 1808 and wilberforce [PERSON] lobbied the american government [GOVERNMENT] to enforce its own mandated prohibition [PERIOD] more strongly . the same year [PERIOD] , wilberforce [PERSON] moved his family [HUMAN GROUP] from clapham [PERSON] to a sizeable mansion [EVENT] with a large garden [PERSON] in kensington gore [PERSON] , closer to the houses [UNKNOWN] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . in worsening health [PROPERTY] by 1812 , wilberforce [PERSON] resigned his yorkshire seat [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , and became mp for the rotten borough [ESTATE] of bramber [UNKNOWN] in sussex [PERSON] , a seat [ABSTRACT ENTITY] with little or no constituency obligations [OBLIGATION] , thus allowing him more time [PERIOD] for his family [HUMAN GROUP] and the causes [CAUSE] that interested him . from 1816 , wilberforce [PERSON] introduced a series [SERIES] of bills [DOCUMENT] which would require the compulsory registration [PERSON] of enslaved people [HUMAN GROUP] , together with details [EVENT] of their country [PLACE] of origin [ARTIFACT] , permitting the illegal importation [PERSON] of foreign slaves [PERSON] to be detected . later in the same year [PERIOD] he began to publicly denounce slavery [INSTITUTION] itself [UNKNOWN] , though he did not demand immediate emancipation [ACT] , believing incremental change [UNKNOWN] to be more effective in achieving abolition [EVENT] . in 1820 , after a period [PERIOD] of poor [UNKNOWN] health [PROPERTY] and with his eyesight [GROUP] failing , wilberforce [PERSON] further limited public [UNKNOWN] activities [ACTIVITY] , although he became embroiled in unsuccessful mediation attempts [ACTION] between king george [PERSON] iv , and his estranged wife caroline [PERSON] of brunswick [PLACE] , who had sought her rights [UNKNOWN] as queen [PERSON] of the realm [NUMBER] . wilberforce [PERSON] still hoped " to lay a foundation [EVENT] for some future measures [MEASURE] for the emancipation [ACT] of the poor [UNKNOWN] slaves [PERSON] " . aware that the cause [CAUSE] would need [UNKNOWN] younger [PERSON] men [PERSON] to continue the work [ACTIVITY] , in 1821 he asked mp thomas fowell buxton [PERSON] to take over leadership [PERSON] of the campaign [SERIES] in the commons [PLACE] . as the 1820s continued , wilberforce [PERSON] increasingly became more of a figurehead [PERSON] for the abolitionist [PERSON] movement [HUMAN GROUP] , although he continued to appear at anti-slavery meetings [ACTIVITY] , welcoming visitors [PERSON] , and maintaining a busy correspondence [SIMILARITY] on the subject [EVENT] . in 1823 wilberforce [PERSON] 's 56-page " appeal [PERSON] to the religion [UNKNOWN] , justice [PROPERTY] and humanity [VERTEBRATE] of the inhabitants [PLACE] of the british empire [STATE] in behalf [PERSON] of the negro slaves [PERSON] in the west indies [PLACE] " was published . the treatise [UNKNOWN] stated that total emancipation [ACT] was morally and ethically required and that slavery [INSTITUTION] was a national crime [EVENT] which must be ended by parliamentary legislation [ACT] to gradually abolish slavery [INSTITUTION] . members [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] did not agree , and government opposition [EVENT] in march [PERIOD] 1823 stymied wilberforce [PERSON] 's call [UNKNOWN] for abolition [EVENT] . on 15 may [PERIOD] 1823 , buxton [PERSON] moved another resolution [DISTANCE] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] for gradual emancipation [ACT] . subsequent debates [STATE] followed on 16 march [PERIOD] and 11 june [PERIOD] 1824 in which wilberforce [PERSON] made his last speeches [SPEECH] in the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] , and which again saw the emancipationists [PERSON] outmanoeuvred by the government [GOVERNMENT] . last years [PERIOD] wilberforce [PERSON] 's health [PROPERTY] was continuing to fail , and he suffered further illnesses [ILLNESS] in 1824 and 1825 . with his family [HUMAN GROUP] concerned that his life [EVENT] was endangered , he declined a peerage [COLLECTION] and resigned his seat [ABSTRACT ENTITY] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , leaving the campaign [SERIES] to others [UNKNOWN] . a marble statue [PERSON] of wilberforce [PERSON] , with an inscription [STYLE] beneath it wilberforce [PERSON] was buried in westminster abbey [PERSON] next to pitt [PERSON] . this memorial statue [PERSON] , by samuel joseph [PERSON] ( 1791-1850 ) , was erected in 1840 in the north choir aisle [PERSON] . in 1826 , wilberforce [PERSON] moved from his large house [PLACE] in kensington gore [PERSON] to hendon park [PLACE] , a more modest property [PROPERTY] in the countryside [PLACE] of mill hill [HILL] , north of london [PLACE] , where he was joined by his son william [PERSON] and family [HUMAN GROUP] . william [PERSON] had attempted a series [SERIES] of educational and career paths [SEQUENCE] , and a venture [PERSON] into farming [QUANTITY] in 1830 led to huge losses [PERSON] , which his father [PERSON] repaid in full , despite offers [OFFER] from others [UNKNOWN] to assist . this left wilberforce [PERSON] with little income [DISEASE] , and he was obliged to let his home [PLACE] and spend the rest [NUMBER] of his life [EVENT] visiting family members [PERSON] and friends [PERSON] . he continued his support [ACT] for the anti-slavery cause [CAUSE] , including attending and chairing meetings [ACTIVITY] of the anti-slavery society [INSTITUTION] . wilberforce [PERSON] approved of the 1830 election victory [PERSON] of the more progressive whigs [LIQUID] , though he was concerned about the implications [PERSON] of their reform bill [PERSON] which proposed the redistribution [PROCESS] of parliamentary seats [ABSTRACT ENTITY] towards newer towns [ENTITY] and cities [SET] and an extension [INSTITUTION] of the franchise [PERMISSION] . in 1833 , wilberforce [PERSON] 's health [PROPERTY] declined further and he suffered a severe attack [EVENT] of influenza [UNKNOWN] from which he never fully recovered . he made a final anti-slavery speech [SPEECH] in april [PERIOD] 1833 at a public [UNKNOWN] meeting [ACTIVITY] in maidstone [UNKNOWN] , kent [PLACE] . the following month [PERIOD] , the whig government [GOVERNMENT] introduced the bill [PERSON] for the abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] , formally saluting wilberforce [PERSON] in the process [PROCESS] . on 26 july [PERIOD] 1833 , wilberforce [PERSON] heard of government concessions [PERMISSION] that guaranteed the passing [EVENT] of the bill [PERSON] for the abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] . the following day [PERIOD] he grew much weaker , and he died early on the morning [PERSON] of 29 july [PERIOD] at his cousin [PERSON] 's house [PLACE] in cadogan place [PLACE] , london [PLACE] . funeral wilberforce [PERSON] had left instructions [ACT] that he be buried with his sister [PERSON] and daughter [PERSON] at st mary [PERSON] 's church [PERSON] , stoke newington [PERSON] , just north of london [PLACE] . however , the leading members [PERSON] of both houses [UNKNOWN] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] urged that he be honoured with a burial [ACT] in westminster abbey [PERSON] . the family [HUMAN GROUP] agreed and , on 3 august [PERIOD] 1833 , wilberforce [PERSON] was buried in the north transept [UNKNOWN] , close to his friend william pitt [PERSON] [PERSON] . the funeral [ACTION] was attended by many members [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , as well as by members [PERSON] of the public [UNKNOWN] . the pallbearers [PERSON] included the duke [PERSON] of gloucester [PLACE] , the lord chancellor henry [PERSON] brougham [PERSON] , and the speaker [PROCESS] of the house [PLACE] of commons [PLACE] charles manners-sutton . while [MEASURE] tributes [ACT] were paid and wilberforce [PERSON] was laid to rest [NUMBER] , both houses [UNKNOWN] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] suspended their business [AMOUNT] as a mark [PERSON] of respect [EVENT] . legacy five years [PERIOD] after his death [EVENT] , sons robert [PERSON] and samuel wilberforce [PERSON] published a five-volume biography [SEQUENCE] about their father [PERSON] , and subsequently a collection [COLLECTION] of his letters [ABILITY] in 1840 . the biography [SEQUENCE] was controversial in that the authors [UNKNOWN] emphasised wilberforce [PERSON] 's role [ROLE] in the abolition movement [HUMAN GROUP] and played down the important work [ACTIVITY] of thomas clarkson [PERSON] . clarkson [PERSON] wrote a book [ENTITY] refuting their version [PERMISSION] of events [EVENT] , and the sons [PERSON] eventually made a half-hearted private apology [STATE] to him and removed the offending passages [ACT] in a revision [INSTANCE] of their biography [SEQUENCE] . for more than a century [PERIOD] , wilberforce [PERSON] 's role [ROLE] in the campaign [SERIES] dominated the historical record [ARTIFACT] . later historians [PERSON] have noted the warm [ACT] and highly productive relationship [RELATIONSHIP] between clarkson [PERSON] and wilberforce [PERSON] , and have termed it one of history [UNIT] 's great partnerships [PERIOD] : without both the parliamentary leadership [PERSON] supplied by wilberforce [PERSON] and the research [EVENT] and public [UNKNOWN] mobilisation [ACT] organised by clarkson [PERSON] , abolition [EVENT] could not have been achieved . as his sons [PERSON] had desired and planned , wilberforce [PERSON] has long been viewed as a christian hero [PERSON] , a statesman-saint held up as a role model [SYSTEM] for putting his faith [PERSON] into action [ACTION] . contemporary evangelical and conservative movements [UNKNOWN] in north america [PLACE] appropriate his name [NAME] and example [ABSTRACT ENTITY] in their activism [FORM] . the strategies [STRATEGY] of wilberforce [PERSON] and other abolitionists [PERSON] are invoked by anti-abortion activists [PERSON] , who controversially equate the abolition [EVENT] of slavery [INSTITUTION] with ending abortion [STATE] . wilberforce [PERSON] has also been described as a humanitarian reformer [PERSON] who contributed to reshaping the political and social attitudes [ATTITUDE] of the time [PERIOD] by promoting concepts [CONCEPT] of social responsibility [RESPONSIBILITY] and action [ACTION] . in the 1940s , the role [ROLE] of wilberforce [PERSON] and the clapham sect [GROUP] in abolition [EVENT] was downplayed by historian eric williams [PERSON] , who argued that abolition [EVENT] was motivated not by humanitarianism [PERSON] but by economics [UNKNOWN] , as the west indian sugar [SUGAR] industry [INSTITUTION] was in decline [ACT] . williams [PERSON] 's approach [PLACE] strongly influenced historians [PERSON] for much of the latter part of the 20th century [PERIOD] . more recent historians [PERSON] have noted that the sugar [SUGAR] industry [INSTITUTION] was still making large profits [AMOUNT] at the time [PERIOD] of the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] , and this has led to a renewed interest [PERSON] in wilberforce [PERSON] and the evangelicals [PERSON] , as well as a recognition [STATE] of the anti-slavery movement [HUMAN GROUP] as a prototype [DOCUMENT] for subsequent humanitarian campaigns [SERIES] . memorials [ACT] see caption [CONDITION] the wilberforce monument [PERSON] in the grounds [UNKNOWN] of hull college [INSTITUTION] , hull [PLACE] , erected in 1834 wilberforce [PERSON] 's life [EVENT] and work [ACTIVITY] have been commemorated in the united kingdom [PLACE] and elsewhere . in westminster abbey [PERSON] , a seated statue [PERSON] of wilberforce [PERSON] by samuel joseph [PERSON] was erected in 1840 , bearing an epitaph [STYLE] praising his christian character [EVENT] and his long labour [ABSTRACT ENTITY] to abolish the slave trade [PERSON] and slavery [INSTITUTION] . in wilberforce [PERSON] 's hometown [EVENT] of hull [PLACE] , a public [UNKNOWN] subscription [QUALITY] in 1834 funded the wilberforce monument [PERSON] , a 31-metre ( 102 ft ) greek doric column [RESOURCE] topped by a statue [PERSON] of wilberforce [PERSON] , which stands in the grounds [UNKNOWN] of hull college [INSTITUTION] near queen [PERSON] 's gardens [UNKNOWN] . wilberforce memorial school [INSTITUTION] for the blind [PERSON] in york [PLACE] was established in 1833 in his honour [UNKNOWN] . wilberforce [PERSON] 's birthplace [LOCATION] was acquired by the city corporation [INSTITUTION] in 1903 and , following renovation [ACT] , wilberforce house [PLACE] in hull [PLACE] was opened as britain [PLACE] 's first slavery museum [PLACE] . in 2006 , the university [INSTITUTION] of hull [PLACE] established the wilberforce institute [INSTITUTION] for the study [STUDY] of slavery [INSTITUTION] and emancipation [ACT] in a building [BUILDING] beside wilberforce house [PLACE] . various churches [PERSON] within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce [PERSON] in their liturgical calendars [ACTIVITY] , and wilberforce university [INSTITUTION] in ohio [PLACE] , united states [PLACE] , founded in 1856 , is named after him . the university [INSTITUTION] was the first owned by african-american people [HUMAN GROUP] , and is an historically black college [INSTITUTION] . in ontario [PLACE] , canada [PLACE] , the wilberforce colony [SEQUENCE] was founded by black reformers [PERSON] , and inhabited by freed slaves [PERSON] from the united states [PLACE] . in media [MEDIUM] * amazing grace [PERSON] , a film [ARTWORK] about wilberforce [PERSON] and the struggle [FORCE] against the slave trade [PERSON] , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary [TIME PERIOD] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] 's anti-slave trade legislation [ACT] . * in 2007 , focus [ELEMENT] on the family [HUMAN GROUP] produced an audio drama [INFORMATION] called grace victorious [PERSON] : the story [PERSON] of william wilberforce [PERSON] , starring chris larkin [PERSON] as wilberforce [PERSON] . works [UNKNOWN] * wilberforce [PERSON] , william [PERSON] ( 1797 ) . a practical view [GROUP] of the prevailing religious system of professed christians [PERSON] , in the middle [PERSON] and higher classes [PERSON] in this country [PLACE] , contrasted with real christianity [PERSON] . london [PLACE] : t. caddell [PERSON] . * wilberforce [PERSON] , william [PERSON] ( 1807 ) . a letter [ABILITY] on the abolition [EVENT] of the slave trade [PERSON] , addressed to the freeholders [UNKNOWN] of yorkshire [PLACE] . london [PLACE] : t. cadell [PERSON] and w. davies , j. hatchard [PERSON] . wilberforce [PERSON] , william [PERSON] ( 1823 ) . an appeal [PERSON] to the religion [UNKNOWN] , justice [PROPERTY] , and humanity [VERTEBRATE] of the inhabitants [PLACE] of the british empire [STATE] in behalf [PERSON] of the negro slaves [PERSON] in the west indies [PLACE] . london [PLACE] : j. hatchard and son [PERSON] .

Objects found

Id Form Freq Tag Context Error
1wilberforce136PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
2abolition34EVENT they persuaded wilberforce to take on the cause of abolition , and he became a leading english abolitionist .
3trade33PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
4house23PLACE statue on a lawn of a two-storey georgian house a statue of william wilberforce outside wilberforce house , his birthplace in hull
5parliament22HUMAN GROUP for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
6bill15PERSON he began using his parliamentary position to advocate reform by introducing a registration bill , proposing limited changes to parliamentary election procedures .
7pitt15PERSON abbey , close to his friend william pitt the younger .
8campaign15SERIES he headed the parliamentary campaign against the british slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the slave trade act 1807 .
9time14PERIOD in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school , which at the time was headed by joseph milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
10life14EVENT early life and education wilberforce was born in hull , in yorkshire , england , on 24 august 1759 .
11society13INSTITUTION he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
12hull13PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
13commons12PLACE early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
14slavery10INSTITUTION wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
15london10PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
16yorkshire9PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
17clarkson8PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
18april8PERIOD on 6 april , he was returned as mp for yorkshire at the age of twenty-four .
19others7UNKNOWN his conversion changed some of his habits , but not his nature : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others towards his new faith .
20conditions7CONDITION british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
21emancipation7ACT excited supporters suggested taking advantage of the large majority to seek the abolition of slavery itself , but wilberforce made it clear that total emancipation was not the immediate goal .
22family7HUMAN GROUP his grandfather , william ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune in the maritime trade with baltic countries .
23reform7AMOUNT in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
24religion7UNKNOWN wilberforce was convinced of the importance of religion , morality and education .
25church7PERSON he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
26support7ACT his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
27members7PERSON he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
28abolitionists7PERSON he began to read widely on the subject and met with a group of abolitionists called the testonites at middleton 's home in the early winter of 1786-1787 .
29years7PERIOD he headed the parliamentary campaign against the british slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the slave trade act 1807 .
30slaves7PERSON by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
31home7PLACE his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
32day6PERIOD he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
33people6HUMAN GROUP drawing on thomas clarkson 's mass of evidence , he described in detail the appalling conditions in which enslaved people travelled from africa in the middle passage and argued that abolishing the trade would also bring an improvement to the conditions of existing slaves in the west indies .
34england6PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
35william6PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
36interest6PERSON despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
37votes6ACT in september 1780 , at the age of 21 and while still a student , wilberforce was elected member of parliament for kingston upon hull , spending over £8,000 , as was the custom of the time , to ensure he received the necessary votes .
38government6GOVERNMENT during the frequent government changes of 1781-1784 , wilberforce supported his friend pitt in parliamentary debates .
39meetings6ACTIVITY old palace yard became a centre for the abolitionists ' campaign and the location for many strategy meetings .
40women6PERSON the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
41education6PROCESS wilberforce was convinced of the importance of religion , morality and education .
42year6PERIOD with his mother struggling to cope , the nine year old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
43william wilberforce6PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
44subject5EVENT wilberforce responded that he " felt the great importance of the subject , and thought himself unequal to the task allotted to him , but yet would not positively decline it " .
45france5PLACE in autumn 1783 , pitt , wilberforce and edward eliot travelled to france for a six-week holiday together .
46views5GROUP his political views were informed by his faith and by his desire to promote christianity and christian ethics in private and public life .
47passage5ACT he headed the parliamentary campaign against the british slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the slave trade act 1807 .
48member5PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
49work5ACTIVITY he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
50evidence5ABSTRACT ENTITY clarkson visited wilberforce weekly , bringing first-hand evidence he had obtained about the slave trade .
51cause5CAUSE they persuaded wilberforce to take on the cause of abolition , and he became a leading english abolitionist .
52rest5NUMBER his regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
53statue5PERSON statue on a lawn of a two-storey georgian house a statue of william wilberforce outside wilberforce house , his birthplace in hull
54may5PERIOD this may have been due to wilberforce 's wish to remain an independent mp.
55changes5UNKNOWN in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
56christianity5PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
57health5PROPERTY wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
58britain5PLACE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
59age4PROPERTY in october 1776 , at the age of seventeen , wilberforce went up to st john 's college , cambridge .
60sister4PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
61faith4PERSON his conversion changed some of his habits , but not his nature : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others towards his new faith .
62causes4CAUSE he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
63thomas clarkson4PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
64end4UNKNOWN by the end of the evening , wilberforce had agreed in general terms that he would bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in parliament , " provided that no person more proper could be found " .
65slave trade4PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
66father4PERSON wilberforce profited from the supportive atmosphere at the school , until his father died in 1768 .
67clapham sect4GROUP he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
68friend4PERSON abbey , close to his friend william pitt the younger .
69man4PERSON free from financial pressures , wilberforce sat as an independent , resolving to be " no party man " .
70motion4ACTION under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak " at holwood house , pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
71bills4DOCUMENT the house of commons passed both bills , but they were defeated in the house of lords .
72letter4ABILITY in november 1786 , he received a letter from sir charles middleton that re-opened his interest in the slave trade .
73income4DISEASE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
74role4ROLE wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
75west indies4PLACE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
76men4PERSON british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
77july4PERIOD february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
78speech4SPEECH on 12 may 1789 , he made his first major speech on the subject of abolition in the house of commons , in which he reasoned that the trade was morally reprehensible and an issue of natural justice .
79century4PERIOD milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th century english nonconformist .
80houses4UNKNOWN with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
81conversion4SPEECH ACT in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
82united states3PLACE in particular , the united states had abolished the slave trade after 1808 and wilberforce lobbied the american government to enforce its own mandated prohibition more strongly .
83british empire3STATE that campaign led to the slavery abolition act 1833 , which abolished slavery in most of the british empire .
84supporter3PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
85career3QUANTITY a native of kingston upon hull , yorkshire , he began his political career in 1780 , and became an independent member of parliament ( mp ) for yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) .
86february3PERIOD february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
87need3UNKNOWN the deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
88children3PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
89westminster abbey3PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
90son3PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
91measures3MEASURE criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
92old palace yard3PERSON in 1786 , wilberforce leased a house in old palace yard , westminster , in order to be near parliament .
93months3PERIOD it was several months before he was able to resume work , and he spent time convalescing at bath and cambridge .
94prevention3ASSET he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
95book3ENTITY united kingdom general election , after which he returned to finishing and publishing his letter , a 400-page book which formed the basis for the final phase of the campaign .
96january3PERIOD however , in january 1788 , he was taken ill with a probable stress-related condition , now thought to be ulcerative colitis .
97justice3PROPERTY on 12 may 1789 , he made his first major speech on the subject of abolition in the house of commons , in which he reasoned that the trade was morally reprehensible and an issue of natural justice .
98improvement3AGREEMENT drawing on thomas clarkson 's mass of evidence , he described in detail the appalling conditions in which enslaved people travelled from africa in the middle passage and argued that abolishing the trade would also bring an improvement to the conditions of existing slaves in the west indies .
99war3EVENT war with france
100june3PERIOD william wilberforce — speech before the house of commons , 18 april 1791 interrupted by a general election in june 1790 , the committee finished hearing witnesses and in april 1791 , with a closely reasoned four-hour speech , wilberforce introduced the first parliamentary bill to abolish the slave trade .
101wilberforce house3PLACE statue on a lawn of a two-storey georgian house a statue of william wilberforce outside wilberforce house , his birthplace in hull
102august3PERIOD february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
103issue3EVENT on 12 may 1789 , he made his first major speech on the subject of abolition in the house of commons , in which he reasoned that the trade was morally reprehensible and an issue of natural justice .
104college3INSTITUTION 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
105change3UNKNOWN a radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban british subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the french colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen .
106nature3NATURE his conversion changed some of his habits , but not his nature : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others towards his new faith .
107movement3HUMAN GROUP 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
108brother3PERSON in october 1784 , wilberforce embarked upon a tour of europe with his mother , sister and isaac milner , the younger brother of his former headmaster .
109animals3ANIMAL he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
110seat3ABSTRACT ENTITY pitt , already set on a political career , encouraged wilberforce to join him in obtaining a parliamentary seat .
111kingston3PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
112lifestyle3PARTICLE in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
113biography3SEQUENCE five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
114lords3PERSON the house of commons passed both bills , but they were defeated in the house of lords .
115university3INSTITUTION early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
116friends3PERSON he made many friends , including the more studious future prime minister william pitt .
117british3UNKNOWN 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
118campaigns3SERIES he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
119march3PERIOD it was arranged that bennet langton , a lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of wilberforce and clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 march 1787 to ask wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
120favour3PERSON wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
121french revolution3PLACE in the meantime , wilberforce and clarkson tried unsuccessfully to take advantage of the egalitarian atmosphere of the french revolution to press for france 's abolition of the trade .
122historians3PERSON later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
123charter3PERSON horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
124legislation3ACT his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
125india3PLACE he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
126decline3ACT wilberforce responded that he " felt the great importance of the subject , and thought himself unequal to the task allotted to him , but yet would not positively decline it " .
127country3PLACE never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
128evangelicals3PERSON evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
129cards3GROUP influenced by methodist scruples , he initially resisted hull 's lively social life , but , as his religious fervour diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls , and played cards .
130importance3QUALITY wilberforce was convinced of the importance of religion , morality and education .
131times3UNKNOWN criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
132leadership3PERSON wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
133name3NAME never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
134cruelty3STATE he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
135africans3PERSON of the estimated 11 million africans transported into slavery , about 1.4 million died during the voyage .
136grandfather3PERSON his grandfather , william ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune in the maritime trade with baltic countries .
137election3PERSON when parliament was dissolved in the spring of 1784 , wilberforce decided to stand as a candidate for the county of yorkshire in the 1784 general election .
138response3RANK in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
139colony2SEQUENCE he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
140approach2PLACE the approach was successful and the foreign slave trade bill received royal assent on 23 may 1806 .
141morals2ACT he advocated change in society through christianity and improvement in morals , education and religion , fearing and opposing radical causes and revolution .
142responsibility2RESPONSIBILITY by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
143condition2CONDITION however , in january 1788 , he was taken ill with a probable stress-related condition , now thought to be ulcerative colitis .
144robert2PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
145ship2SHIP james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
146portrait2PERSON william wilberforce portrait by karl anton hickel , c. 1794 member of parliament
147prosecution2INSTITUTION the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
148involvement2ACT wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
149kent2PLACE the same spring , on 12 may 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce held a conversation with william pitt and the future prime minister william grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on pitt 's estate in kent .
150sabbath2PERSON his views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a god-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
151hannah more2PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
152disgrace2CONDITION never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
153foundation2EVENT he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
154countries2STATE his grandfather , william ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune in the maritime trade with baltic countries .
155notice2ACT under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak " at holwood house , pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
156renewal2ACT horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
157movements2UNKNOWN ramsay was horrified by the conditions endured by the enslaved peoples , both at sea and on the plantations and returned to england and joined abolitionist movements .
158atmosphere2LANGUAGE wilberforce profited from the supportive atmosphere at the school , until his father died in 1768 .
159case2STUDY the quakers , already working for abolition , recognised the need for influence within parliament , and urged clarkson to secure a commitment from wilberforce to bring forward the case for abolition in the house of commons .
160proclamation2STATEMENT a proclamation for the encouragement of piety and virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
161quakers2UNKNOWN the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
162activists2PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
163united kingdom2PLACE united kingdom general election , after which he returned to finishing and publishing his letter , a 400-page book which formed the basis for the final phase of the campaign .
164christians2PERSON to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
165politician2PERSON english politician and abolitionist ( 1759-1833 )
166money2MONEY they formed the sierra leone company , with wilberforce subscribing liberally to the project in money and time .
167decision2DECISION abolition of the transatlantic slave trade initial decision
168church mission society2INSTITUTION he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
169dissection2PROCESS in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
170use2USE inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality , use of time , vanity , self-control and relationships with others .
171africa2PLACE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
172poor2UNKNOWN wilberforce was a small , sickly and delicate child with poor eyesight .
173view2GROUP to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
174westminster2PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
175piety2PERSON he sought to elevate the status of religion in public and private life , making piety fashionable in both the upper- and middle-classes of society .
176journey2PERSON milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist .
177tributes2ACT as tributes were made to wilberforce , whose face streamed with tears , the bill was carried by 283 votes to 16 .
178rights2UNKNOWN wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
179arts degree2EVENT despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
180prime minister2HUMAN ROLE he made many friends , including the more studious future prime minister william pitt .
181sons2PERSON five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
182relatives2PERSON he attended an " indifferent " boarding school in putney for two years and spent his holidays in wimbledon , where he grew extremely fond of his relatives .
183company2INSTITUTION they formed the sierra leone company , with wilberforce subscribing liberally to the project in money and time .
184groups2GROUP abolition continued to be associated in the public consciousness with the french revolution and with british radical groups , resulting in a decline in public support .
185history2UNIT never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
186redistribution2PROCESS from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
187hearings2UNKNOWN the hearings were not completed by the end of the parliamentary session and were deferred until the following year .
188session2PERIOD early parliamentary action wilberforce had planned to introduce a motion giving notice that he would bring forward a bill for the abolition of the slave trade during the 1789 parliamentary session .
189power2POWER criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
190friend william pitt2PERSON abbey , close to his friend william pitt the younger .
191influence2ELEMENT he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
192december2PERIOD pitt became prime minister in december 1783 , with wilberforce a key supporter of his minority government .
193inhabitants2PLACE in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
194cabinet2PERSON he gave general support to the grenville-fox administration , which brought more abolitionists into the cabinet ; wilberforce and charles fox led the campaign in the house of commons .
195eyesight2GROUP wilberforce was a small , sickly and delicate child with poor eyesight .
196hull college2INSTITUTION memorials see caption the wilberforce monument in the grounds of hull college , hull , erected in 1834 wilberforce 's life and work have been commemorated in the united kingdom and elsewhere .
197appeal2PERSON in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
198mother2PERSON with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
199spring2PERSON when parliament was dissolved in the spring of 1784 , wilberforce decided to stand as a candidate for the county of yorkshire in the 1784 general election .
200headmaster2DEVICE his family opposed a return to hull grammar school because the headmaster had become a methodist , and wilberforce continued his education at pocklington school from 1771 to 1776 .
201days2PERIOD wilberforce died just three days after hearing that the passage of the act through parliament was assured .
202school2INSTITUTION in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school , which at the time was headed by joseph milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
203samuel2PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
204study2STUDY the deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
205death2EVENT following pitt 's death in january 1806 , wilberforce increased his collaboration with the whigs , especially the abolitionists .
206wimbledon2PLACE with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
207parliamentary session2PERIOD early parliamentary action wilberforce had planned to introduce a motion giving notice that he would bring forward a bill for the abolition of the slave trade during the 1789 parliamentary session .
208material2MATERIAL alternatively , wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced pitt that he was not ministerial material .
209lack2UNKNOWN despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
210tour2EVENT in october 1784 , wilberforce embarked upon a tour of europe with his mother , sister and isaac milner , the younger brother of his former headmaster .
211abolitionist2PERSON english politician and abolitionist ( 1759-1833 )
212action2ACTION early parliamentary action wilberforce had planned to introduce a motion giving notice that he would bring forward a bill for the abolition of the slave trade during the 1789 parliamentary session .
213character2EVENT he disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as elizabeth heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in scripture . "
214philanthropist2PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
215caption2CONDITION see caption diagram of a slave ship , the brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson met with wilberforce for the first time at old palace yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
216cities2SET from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
217ramsay2PERSON james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
218hull grammar school2INSTITUTION in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school , which at the time was headed by joseph milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
219cambridge2PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
220efforts2ACTION this is the first fruits of our efforts ; let us persevere and our triumph will be complete .
221granville sharp2PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
222resolution2DISTANCE growing more alarmed , on 31 december 1794 , wilberforce moved that the government seek a peaceful resolution with france , a stance that created a temporary breach in his long friendship with pitt .
223grounds2UNKNOWN memorials see caption the wilberforce monument in the grounds of hull college , hull , erected in 1834 wilberforce 's life and work have been commemorated in the united kingdom and elsewhere .
224meeting2ACTIVITY after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
225writer2PERSON the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
226labour2ABSTRACT ENTITY never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
227humanity2VERTEBRATE in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
228month2PERIOD the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
229towns2ENTITY from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
230advantage2CONDITION in the meantime , wilberforce and clarkson tried unsuccessfully to take advantage of the egalitarian atmosphere of the french revolution to press for france 's abolition of the trade .
231concern2PERSON in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
232correspondence2SIMILARITY although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
233party2FORCE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
234middle classes2PERSON to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
235birthplace2LOCATION statue on a lawn of a two-storey georgian house a statue of william wilberforce outside wilberforce house , his birthplace in hull
236friendship2RELATIONSHIP despite their close friendship , there is no record that pitt offered wilberforce a ministerial position in this or future governments .
237uncle2PERSON with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
238call2UNKNOWN this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
239record2ARTIFACT despite their close friendship , there is no record that pitt offered wilberforce a ministerial position in this or future governments .
240barbara2STATE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
241result2RESULT the deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
242somerset2PERSON despite the urgings of friends to slow down , the couple married at the church of st swithin in bath , somerset , on 30 may 1797 .
243vice2PERSON he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
244aunt2PERSON with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
245crime2EVENT the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
246colonies2SEQUENCE british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
247recognition2STATE already we have gained one victory ; we have obtained , for these poor creatures , the recognition of their human nature , which , for a while was most shamefully denied .
248position2POSITION despite their close friendship , there is no record that pitt offered wilberforce a ministerial position in this or future governments .
249october2PERIOD in office 31 october 1780 -
250inscription2STYLE an inscription at the bottom reads " " am i not a man and a brother ? "
251attitudes2ATTITUDE by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
252unions2STATE wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
253servants2PERSON he was exceptionally hospitable , and could not bear to sack any of his servants .
254observance2FORM his views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a god-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
255series2SERIES from 1816 , wilberforce introduced a series of bills which would require the compulsory registration of enslaved people , together with details of their country of origin , permitting the illegal importation of foreign slaves to be detected .
256wilberforce monument2PERSON memorials see caption the wilberforce monument in the grounds of hull college , hull , erected in 1834 wilberforce 's life and work have been commemorated in the united kingdom and elsewhere .
257prevailing religious system2SYSTEM to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
258immorality2ACT his views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a god-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
259bath2PLACE it was several months before he was able to resume work , and he spent time convalescing at bath and cambridge .
260speeches2SPEECH wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
261activities2ACTIVITY they were devoted to each other , and barbara was very attentive and supportive to wilberforce in his increasing ill health , though she showed little interest in his political activities .
262establishment2INSTITUTION the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
263clergyman2DEVICE he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
264behalf2PERSON in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
265whigs2LIQUID following pitt 's death in january 1806 , wilberforce increased his collaboration with the whigs , especially the abolitionists .
266kensington gore2PERSON the same year , wilberforce moved his family from clapham to a sizeable mansion with a large garden in kensington gore , closer to the houses of parliament .
267sierra leone2PLACE he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
268j. hatchard2PERSON davies , j. hatchard .
269hypocrisy2RESOURCE the radical writer william cobbett was among those who attacked what they saw as wilberforce 's hypocrisy in campaigning for better working conditions for enslaved people while british workers lived in terrible conditions at home .
270face2PERSON as tributes were made to wilberforce , whose face streamed with tears , the bill was carried by 283 votes to 16 .
271samuel joseph2PERSON this memorial statue , by samuel joseph ( 1791-1850 ) , was erected in 1840 in the north choir aisle .
272effect2EFFECT wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
273order2PERSON his views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a god-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
274illnesses2ILLNESS his regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
275conservatism2ATTITUDE his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
276issues2EVENT wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
277group2GROUP in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
278winter2PERSON early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
279suppression2ACT he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
280middleton2PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
281phase2UNKNOWN final phase of the campaign see caption the house of commons in wilberforce 's day by augustus pugin and thomas rowlandson ( 1808-1811 )
282bramber2UNKNOWN february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
283memorials1ACT memorials see caption the wilberforce monument in the grounds of hull college , hull , erected in 1834 wilberforce 's life and work have been commemorated in the united kingdom and elsewhere .
284blasphemy1ACT the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
285calendars1ACTIVITY various churches within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and wilberforce university in ohio , united states , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
286parishes1PLACE yearly , he gave away thousands of pounds , much of it to clergymen to distribute in their parishes .
287abortion1STATE the strategies of wilberforce and other abolitionists are invoked by anti abortion activists , who controversially equate the abolition of slavery with ending abortion .
288classes1PERSON evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
289tide1ABSTRACT ENTITY a proclamation for the encouragement of piety and virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
290charles grey1PERSON lord grenville , the prime minister , successfully introduced an abolition bill in the house of lords first , then charles grey moved for a second reading in the commons on 23 february 1807 .
291parliamentary reform1AMOUNT from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
292column1RESOURCE greek doric column topped by a statue of wilberforce , which stands in the grounds of hull college near queen 's gardens .
293york1PLACE wilberforce memorial school for the blind in york was established in 1833 in his honour .
294best seller1PERSON
295diarist1PERSON wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
296introduction1ACT a radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban british subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the french colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen .
297calling1PERSON on 2 april 1792 , wilberforce brought another bill calling for abolition of the slave trade .
298joseph milner1PERSON in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school , which at the time was headed by joseph milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
299suspension1PERSON critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
300estate1ESTATE the same spring , on 12 may 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce held a conversation with william pitt and the future prime minister william grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on pitt 's estate in kent .
301trusting1ACTIVITY on this occasion and throughout the campaign , abolition was held back by wilberforce 's trusting , even credulous nature , and his deferential attitude towards those in power .
302british colonies1SEQUENCE british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
303city corporation1INSTITUTION wilberforce 's birthplace was acquired by the city corporation in 1903 and , following renovation , wilberforce house in hull was opened as britain 's first slavery museum .
304sentences1PERSON the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
305election procedures1PROCEDURE he began using his parliamentary position to advocate reform by introducing a registration bill , proposing limited changes to parliamentary election procedures .
306presence1ABSTRACT ENTITY after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
307prohibition1PERIOD in particular , the united states had abolished the slave trade after 1808 and wilberforce lobbied the american government to enforce its own mandated prohibition more strongly .
308bodies1BODY in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
309colitis1UNKNOWN however , in january 1788 , he was taken ill with a probable stress-related condition , now thought to be ulcerative colitis .
310brunswick1PLACE iv , and his estranged wife caroline of brunswick , who had sought her rights as queen of the realm .
311younger1PERSON abbey , close to his friend william pitt the younger .
312foreign slave trade bill1PERSON the approach was successful and the foreign slave trade bill received royal assent on 23 may 1806 .
313implications1PERSON wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their reform bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
314collaboration1PERSON following pitt 's death in january 1806 , wilberforce increased his collaboration with the whigs , especially the abolitionists .
315duelling1UNKNOWN he was also opposed to duelling , which he described as the " disgrace of a christian society " and was appalled when his friend pitt engaged in a duel with george tierney in 1798 , particularly as it occurred on a sunday , the christian day of rest .
316capital punishment1PLACE wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
317indians1UNKNOWN horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
318radicalism1PERSON after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
319pallbearers1PERSON the pallbearers included the duke of gloucester , the lord chancellor henry brougham , and the speaker of the house of commons charles manners-sutton .
320chimney sweeps1UNKNOWN
321mp thomas fowell buxton1PERSON aware that the cause would need younger men to continue the work , in 1821 he asked mp thomas fowell buxton to take over leadership of the campaign in the commons .
322wing1PERSON a supporter of the evangelical wing of the church of england , wilberforce believed that the revitalisation of the church and individual christian observance would lead to a harmonious , moral society .
323candidate1AMOUNT when parliament was dissolved in the spring of 1784 , wilberforce decided to stand as a candidate for the county of yorkshire in the 1784 general election .
324death sentences1PERSON although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
325poverty1QUALITY he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
326journal1ABSTRACT ENTITY he started to rise early to read the bible and pray and kept a private journal .
327william wilberforce portrait1PERSON william wilberforce portrait by karl anton hickel , c. 1794 member of parliament
328impact1ACTION greeted largely with public indifference , wilberforce sought to increase its impact by mobilising public figures to the cause , and by founding the society for the suppression of vice .
329proposals1ABSTRACT ENTITY in february 1785 , wilberforce returned to london temporarily , to support pitt 's proposals for parliamentary reforms .
330borough1ESTATE in worsening health by 1812 , wilberforce resigned his yorkshire seat , and became mp for the rotten borough of bramber in sussex , a seat with little or no constituency obligations , thus allowing him more time for his family and the causes that interested him .
331criticism1ACT his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
332climate1STUDY after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
333opium1SUBSTANCE his regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
334conversion experience1EFFECT in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
335revision1INSTANCE clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
336reading1PROPERTY alternatively , wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced pitt that he was not ministerial material .
337st christopher1PLACE james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
338injustices1STATE his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
339peerage1COLLECTION with his family concerned that his life was endangered , he declined a peerage and resigned his seat in parliament , leaving the campaign to others .
340debate1STATE after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
341while1MEASURE his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
342duel1PERSON he was also opposed to duelling , which he described as the " disgrace of a christian society " and was appalled when his friend pitt engaged in a duel with george tierney in 1798 , particularly as it occurred on a sunday , the christian day of rest .
343november1PERIOD in november 1786 , he received a letter from sir charles middleton that re-opened his interest in the slave trade .
344essayist william hazlitt1PERSON wilberforce 's actions led the essayist william hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
345st james1PERSON with his mother struggling to cope , the nine-year-old wilberforce was sent to a prosperous uncle and aunt with houses in both st james 's place , london , and wimbledon .
346italy1PLACE he rejoined the party in genoa , italy , and they continued their tour to switzerland .
347renovation1ACT wilberforce 's birthplace was acquired by the city corporation in 1903 and , following renovation , wilberforce house in hull was opened as britain 's first slavery museum .
348degeneracy1UNKNOWN moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
349respect1EVENT this and other societies in which wilberforce was a prime mover , mustered support for the prosecution of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws , including brothel keepers , distributors of pornographic material , and those who did not respect the sabbath .
350british missionary work1ACTIVITY he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
351requests1REQUEST although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
352new testament doctrine1PLACE this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
353real christianity1PERSON to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
354debts1MONEY he paid off the debts of others , supported education and missions , and in a year of food shortages , gave to charity more than his own yearly income .
355volume1AMOUNT wilberforce and clarkson collected a large volume of evidence against the slave trade over the previous two decades , and wilberforce spent the latter part of 1806 writing a letter on the abolition of the slave trade , which was a comprehensive restatement of the abolitionists ' case .
356amazing grace1PERSON amazing grace , a film about wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
357guilty1DECISION the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
358traffic1QUANTITY never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
359evenings1UNKNOWN after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
360thirties1SIGN in his youth , william wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend thomas babington recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
361balls1BALL influenced by methodist scruples , he initially resisted hull 's lively social life , but , as his religious fervour diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls , and played cards .
362location1LOCATION old palace yard became a centre for the abolitionists ' campaign and the location for many strategy meetings .
363fewer1PERSON they had six children in fewer than ten years :
364william pitt1PERSON abbey , close to his friend william pitt the younger .
365outbreak1OCCURRENCE the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
366couple1EVENT despite the urgings of friends to slow down , the couple married at the church of st swithin in bath , somerset , on 30 may 1797 .
367king george iii1PERSON at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
368supporters1PERSON excited supporters suggested taking advantage of the large majority to seek the abolition of slavery itself , but wilberforce made it clear that total emancipation was not the immediate goal .
369manners1PERSON by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
370african institution1INSTITUTION emancipation of enslaved africans wilberforce worked with the members of the african institution to ensure the enforcement of the abolition of the slave trade and to promote abolitionist negotiations with other countries .
371honour1UNKNOWN wilberforce memorial school for the blind in york was established in 1833 in his honour .
372autumn1PERSON in autumn 1783 , pitt , wilberforce and edward eliot travelled to france for a six-week holiday together .
373success1ACT let us not despair ; it is a blessed cause , and success , ere long , will crown our exertions .
374person1PERSON by the end of the evening , wilberforce had agreed in general terms that he would bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in parliament , " provided that no person more proper could be found " .
375project1ACTION they formed the sierra leone company , with wilberforce subscribing liberally to the project in money and time .
376blind1PERSON wilberforce memorial school for the blind in york was established in 1833 in his honour .
377clapham1PERSON he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
378consideration1AMOUNT the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
379combination act1ACT wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
380wales1PLACE the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
381gentlemen1PERSON wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
382assent1UNKNOWN the approach was successful and the foreign slave trade bill received royal assent on 23 may 1806 .
383minority government1GOVERNMENT pitt became prime minister in december 1783 , with wilberforce a key supporter of his minority government .
384jews1PERSON he was a founding member of the church missionary society ( since renamed the church mission society ) and an early vice-president of the london society for promoting christianity among the jews ( later the church 's ministry among jewish people ) .
385sins1STUDY the writer and clergyman sydney smith criticised wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
386west indian sugar industry1INSTITUTION in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
387mendips1UNKNOWN he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
388spanish1PLACE british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
389grace victorious1PERSON in 2007 , focus on the family produced an audio drama called grace victorious : the story of william wilberforce , starring chris larkin as wilberforce .
390peak years1PERIOD british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
391elizabeth1PLACE he was the only son of robert wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , elizabeth bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
392mansion1EVENT the same year , wilberforce moved his family from clapham to a sizeable mansion with a large garden in kensington gore , closer to the houses of parliament .
393east india company1INSTITUTION horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
394thing1ENTITY he found it difficult to believe that men of rank would not do what he perceived to be the right thing , and was reluctant to confront them when they did not .
395st john1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
396elizabeth bird1BIRD he was the only son of robert wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , elizabeth bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
397building1BUILDING in 2006 , the university of hull established the wilberforce institute for the study of slavery and emancipation in a building beside wilberforce house .
398british made goods1UNKNOWN
399god1PERSON he underwent an evangelical conversion , regretting his past life and resolving to commit his future life and work to the service of god .
400leanings1UNKNOWN wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
401presentation1PERSON the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
402british campaign1SERIES the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
403nation1PERSON this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
404king george1PERSON at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
405st mary woolnoth1PLACE he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
406august kingston1PERSON
407persevere1UNKNOWN this is the first fruits of our efforts ; let us persevere and our triumph will be complete .
408polygamy1CONDITION speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
409abroad1LAND his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
410bennet langton1PERSON it was arranged that bennet langton , a lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of wilberforce and clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 march 1787 to ask wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
411denounce slavery1INSTITUTION later in the same year he began to publicly denounce slavery itself , though he did not demand immediate emancipation , believing incremental change to be more effective in achieving abolition .
412commons debates1STATE early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
413clever ploy1PERSON this was passed by 230 to 85 votes , but wilberforce believed that it was little more than a clever ploy to ensure that total abolition would be delayed indefinitely .
414karl anton hickel1PERSON william wilberforce portrait by karl anton hickel , c. 1794 member of parliament
415invitation1SPEECH ACT wilberforce accepted an invitation to share a house with henry thornton in 1792 , moving into his own home after thornton 's marriage in 1796 .
416anti slavery society1INSTITUTION
417relationship1RELATIONSHIP later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
418countryside1PLACE in 1826 , wilberforce moved from his large house in kensington gore to hendon park , a more modest property in the countryside of mill hill , north of london , where he was joined by his son william and family .
419mark1PERSON while tributes were paid and wilberforce was laid to rest , both houses of parliament suspended their business as a mark of respect .
420lawyer1PERSON for his eldest son , a lawyer and member of parliament , see william wilberforce ( 1798-1879 ) .
421sierra leone company1INSTITUTION they formed the sierra leone company , with wilberforce subscribing liberally to the project in money and time .
422indulgent1UNKNOWN wilberforce was an indulgent and adoring father who revelled in his time at home and at play with his children .
423inconsistency1QUALITY criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
424meantime1ABSTRACT ENTITY in the meantime , wilberforce and clarkson tried unsuccessfully to take advantage of the egalitarian atmosphere of the french revolution to press for france 's abolition of the trade .
425treatise1UNKNOWN the treatise stated that total emancipation was morally and ethically required and that slavery was a national crime which must be ended by parliamentary legislation to gradually abolish slavery .
426workers1UNKNOWN the radical writer william cobbett was among those who attacked what they saw as wilberforce 's hypocrisy in campaigning for better working conditions for enslaved people while british workers lived in terrible conditions at home .
427anniversary1TIME PERIOD amazing grace , a film about wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
428david hartley1PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
429portuguese1UNKNOWN british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
430extension1INSTITUTION wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their reform bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
431laws1ACT wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
432contact1QUANTITY in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
433instructions1ACT funeral wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at st mary 's church , stoke newington , just north of london .
434holidays1PERIOD he attended an " indifferent " boarding school in putney for two years and spent his holidays in wimbledon , where he grew extremely fond of his relatives .
435absence1ABSENCE in wilberforce 's absence , pitt , who had long been supportive of abolition , introduced the preparatory motion himself , and ordered a privy council investigation into the slave trade , followed by a house of commons review .
436penalties1PERSON critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
437student life1EVENT instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
438evangelical christianity1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
439pounds1UNIT yearly , he gave away thousands of pounds , much of it to clergymen to distribute in their parishes .
440england mother1PERSON wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
441duke1PERSON the pallbearers included the duke of gloucester , the lord chancellor henry brougham , and the speaker of the house of commons charles manners-sutton .
442stages1STAGE in june 1804 , wilberforce 's bill to abolish the slave trade successfully passed all its stages through the house of commons .
443pressures1OCCURRENCE free from financial pressures , wilberforce sat as an independent , resolving to be " no party man " .
444privy council report1PERSON with the publication of the privy council report in april 1789 and following months of planning , wilberforce commenced his parliamentary campaign .
445dutch1PERSON british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
446master1PERSON despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
447drama1INFORMATION in 2007 , focus on the family produced an audio drama called grace victorious : the story of william wilberforce , starring chris larkin as wilberforce .
448voyage1ACT of the estimated 11 million africans transported into slavery , about 1.4 million died during the voyage .
449act1ACT he headed the parliamentary campaign against the british slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the slave trade act 1807 .
450service1INSTITUTION he underwent an evangelical conversion , regretting his past life and resolving to commit his future life and work to the service of god .
451parliamentary select committee1HUMAN GROUP in january 1790 , wilberforce succeeded in speeding up the hearings by gaining approval for a smaller parliamentary select committee to consider the vast quantity of evidence which had been accumulated .
452apology1STATE clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
453tardiness1RESULT alternatively , wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced pitt that he was not ministerial material .
454government changes1UNKNOWN during the frequent government changes of 1781-1784 , wilberforce supported his friend pitt in parliamentary debates .
455st mary1PERSON he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
456island1PLACE james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
457leader1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
458partnerships1PERIOD later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
459rise1PERSON milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist .
460franchise1PERMISSION wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their reform bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
461evangelicalism1PERSON wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
462ships1SHIP british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
463wilberforce university1INSTITUTION various churches within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and wilberforce university in ohio , united states , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
464resolutions1DISTANCE he moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
465funeral1ACTION funeral wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at st mary 's church , stoke newington , just north of london .
466mill hill1HILL in 1826 , wilberforce moved from his large house in kensington gore to hendon park , a more modest property in the countryside of mill hill , north of london , where he was joined by his son william and family .
467food shortages1DEFICIENCY he paid off the debts of others , supported education and missions , and in a year of food shortages , gave to charity more than his own yearly income .
468brookes1PERSON see caption diagram of a slave ship , the brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson met with wilberforce for the first time at old palace yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
469transept1UNKNOWN the family agreed and , on 3 august 1833 , wilberforce was buried in the north transept , close to his friend william pitt .
470god given1UNKNOWN
471merits1QUANTITY criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
472cousin1PERSON he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
473committee1HUMAN GROUP in january 1790 , wilberforce succeeded in speeding up the hearings by gaining approval for a smaller parliamentary select committee to consider the vast quantity of evidence which had been accumulated .
474youth1PERIOD in his youth , william wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend thomas babington recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
475directors1PERSON the plan was unsuccessful due to lobbying by the directors of the company , who feared that their commercial interests would be damaged .
476interests1PERSON the plan was unsuccessful due to lobbying by the directors of the company , who feared that their commercial interests would be damaged .
477negotiations1PROCESS emancipation of enslaved africans wilberforce worked with the members of the african institution to ensure the enforcement of the abolition of the slave trade and to promote abolitionist negotiations with other countries .
478promotions1RESULT although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
479tories1UNKNOWN he was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
480voice1EVENT wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
481parliamentarians1UNKNOWN with several parliamentarians signalling support for the bill , the opponents of abolition delayed the vote by proposing that the house of commons hear its own evidence ; wilberforce , in a decision that has been criticised for prolonging the slave trade , reluctantly agreed .
482shrimp1PERSON wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
483whig governments1GOVERNMENT criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
484restatement1ACT wilberforce and clarkson collected a large volume of evidence against the slave trade over the previous two decades , and wilberforce spent the latter part of 1806 writing a letter on the abolition of the slave trade , which was a comprehensive restatement of the abolitionists ' case .
485duchess1EVENT the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
486losses1PERSON william had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
487great britain1PLACE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
488belgravia1PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
489john1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
490prejudice1PERSON speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
491friend pitt1PERSON during the frequent government changes of 1781-1784 , wilberforce supported his friend pitt in parliamentary debates .
492ethics1SET his political views were informed by his faith and by his desire to promote christianity and christian ethics in private and public life .
493pocklington school1INSTITUTION his family opposed a return to hull grammar school because the headmaster had become a methodist , and wilberforce continued his education at pocklington school from 1771 to 1776 .
494drinking sessions1PERIOD instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
495brothel keepers1PERSON this and other societies in which wilberforce was a prime mover , mustered support for the prosecution of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws , including brothel keepers , distributors of pornographic material , and those who did not respect the sabbath .
496seats1ABSTRACT ENTITY from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
497yorkshire seat1PLACE in worsening health by 1812 , wilberforce resigned his yorkshire seat , and became mp for the rotten borough of bramber in sussex , a seat with little or no constituency obligations , thus allowing him more time for his family and the causes that interested him .
498radicals1PERSON he was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
499events1EVENT clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
500church missionary society1INSTITUTION he was a founding member of the church missionary society ( since renamed the church mission society ) and an early vice-president of the london society for promoting christianity among the jews ( later the church 's ministry among jewish people ) .
501committees1PERSON the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
502pall mall1PERSON wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
503works1UNKNOWN works * wilberforce , william ( 1797 ) .
504cultivation1ACT wilberforce , the clapham sect and others were anxious to demonstrate that africans , and particularly freed slaves , had human and economic abilities beyond the slave trade and capable of sustaining a well-ordered society , trade and cultivation .
505occasion1ABSTRACT ENTITY on this occasion and throughout the campaign , abolition was held back by wilberforce 's trusting , even credulous nature , and his deferential attitude towards those in power .
506constituency obligations1OBLIGATION in worsening health by 1812 , wilberforce resigned his yorkshire seat , and became mp for the rotten borough of bramber in sussex , a seat with little or no constituency obligations , thus allowing him more time for his family and the causes that interested him .
507desire1PERSON his political views were informed by his faith and by his desire to promote christianity and christian ethics in private and public life .
508abilities1ABILITY wilberforce , the clapham sect and others were anxious to demonstrate that africans , and particularly freed slaves , had human and economic abilities beyond the slave trade and capable of sustaining a well-ordered society , trade and cultivation .
509barbara ann spooner1PERSON in his youth , william wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend thomas babington recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
510advances1UNKNOWN moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
511advice1COGNITIVE STATE although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
512criminals1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
513africans wilberforce1PERSON emancipation of enslaved africans wilberforce worked with the members of the african institution to ensure the enforcement of the abolition of the slave trade and to promote abolitionist negotiations with other countries .
514wife caroline1PERSON iv , and his estranged wife caroline of brunswick , who had sought her rights as queen of the realm .
515ontario1PLACE in ontario , canada , the wilberforce colony was founded by black reformers , and inhabited by freed slaves from the united states .
516period1PERIOD in 1820 , after a period of poor health and with his eyesight failing , wilberforce further limited public activities , although he became embroiled in unsuccessful mediation attempts between king george
517freeholders1UNKNOWN a letter on the abolition of the slave trade , addressed to the freeholders of yorkshire .
518socialite madame de staël1PERSON the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
519lawyer james stephen1PERSON a radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban british subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the french colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen .
520family fortune1PERSON his grandfather , william ( 1690-1774 ) , had made the family fortune in the maritime trade with baltic countries .
521profaneness1PROPERTY moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
522boroughs1ESTATE from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
523sense1UNKNOWN by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
524figures1FIGURE greeted largely with public indifference , wilberforce sought to increase its impact by mobilising public figures to the cause , and by founding the society for the suppression of vice .
525custom1PERSON in september 1780 , at the age of 21 and while still a student , wilberforce was elected member of parliament for kingston upon hull , spending over £8,000 , as was the custom of the time , to ensure he received the necessary votes .
526wilberforce institute1INSTITUTION in 2006 , the university of hull established the wilberforce institute for the study of slavery and emancipation in a building beside wilberforce house .
527load1PERSON never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
528help1UNKNOWN although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
529author james boswell1PERSON wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
530concepts1CONCEPT wilberforce has also been described as a humanitarian reformer who contributed to reshaping the political and social attitudes of the time by promoting concepts of social responsibility and action .
531influences1UNKNOWN wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
532french riviera1PLACE they visited the french riviera and had dinners , played cards , and gambled .
533catholic emancipation1ACT wilberforce initially strongly opposed bills for catholic emancipation , which would have allowed catholics to become mps , hold public office and serve in the army , although by 1813 , he had changed his views and spoke in favour of a similar bill .
534reaction1PERSON after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
535conversationalist1PERSON witty , generous and an excellent conversationalist , wilberforce was a popular figure .
536royal society1INSTITUTION with others , wilberforce founded the world 's first animal welfare organisation , the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ( later the royal society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ) .
537st swithin1PLACE despite the urgings of friends to slow down , the couple married at the church of st swithin in bath , somerset , on 30 may 1797 .
538slave trade act1ACT he headed the parliamentary campaign against the british slave trade for 20 years until the passage of the slave trade act 1807 .
539whale1PERSON wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
540sunday newspapers1PERSON wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
541ridicule1ABSTRACT ENTITY evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
542duty1ATTITUDE wilberforce was generous with his time and money , believing that those with wealth had a duty to give a significant portion of their income to the needy .
543josiah wedgwood1PERSON medallion created as part of anti-slavery campaign by josiah wedgwood , 1787
544t. caddell1PERSON london : t. caddell .
545henry1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
546victory1PERSON already we have gained one victory ; we have obtained , for these poor creatures , the recognition of their human nature , which , for a while was most shamefully denied .
547planning1PLAN with the publication of the privy council report in april 1789 and following months of planning , wilberforce commenced his parliamentary campaign .
548evening1PERIOD by the end of the evening , wilberforce had agreed in general terms that he would bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in parliament , " provided that no person more proper could be found " .
549wish1PERSON this may have been due to wilberforce 's wish to remain an independent mp.
550slavery abolition act1ACT that campaign led to the slavery abolition act 1833 , which abolished slavery in most of the british empire .
551williams1PERSON in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
552overthrow1PROCESS he was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
553public1UNKNOWN evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
554crisis1EVENT the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
555confusion1DEFICIENCY concerned about " bad men who wished to produce anarchy and confusion " , he approved of the government 's six acts , which further limited public meetings and seditious writings .
556sati1PERSON speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
557testimony1PERSON this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
558cousin henry thornton1PERSON he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
559sea1PLACE ramsay was horrified by the conditions endured by the enslaved peoples , both at sea and on the plantations and returned to england and joined abolitionist movements .
560focus1ELEMENT in 2007 , focus on the family produced an audio drama called grace victorious : the story of william wilberforce , starring chris larkin as wilberforce .
561opposition1EVENT he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
562gardens1UNKNOWN greek doric column topped by a statue of wilberforce , which stands in the grounds of hull college near queen 's gardens .
563outline1PLAN the face and shoulders are painted , while the rest of the portrait contains a sketched outline .
564matters1PERSON moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
565sons robert1PERSON five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
566chaplains1UNKNOWN horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
567measure1MEASURE in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
568queen1PERSON iv , and his estranged wife caroline of brunswick , who had sought her rights as queen of the realm .
569eric williams1PERSON in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
570epitaph1STYLE in westminster abbey , a seated statue of wilberforce by samuel joseph was erected in 1840 , bearing an epitaph praising his christian character and his long labour to abolish the slave trade and slavery .
571commons charles manners sutton1PERSON
572addition1PERSON horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
573marriage1EVENT wilberforce accepted an invitation to share a house with henry thornton in 1792 , moving into his own home after thornton 's marriage in 1796 .
574buxton1PERSON aware that the cause would need younger men to continue the work , in 1821 he asked mp thomas fowell buxton to take over leadership of the campaign in the commons .
575british workers1UNKNOWN the radical writer william cobbett was among those who attacked what they saw as wilberforce 's hypocrisy in campaigning for better working conditions for enslaved people while british workers lived in terrible conditions at home .
576morality1EVENT wilberforce was convinced of the importance of religion , morality and education .
577oil portrait1PERSON an unfinished oil portrait of wilberforce .
578solution1OCCURRENCE henry dundas , as home secretary , proposed a compromise solution of gradual abolition of the trade over several years .
579wilberforce memorial school1INSTITUTION wilberforce memorial school for the blind in york was established in 1833 in his honour .
580disorganisation1UNKNOWN alternatively , wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced pitt that he was not ministerial material .
581trade legislation1ACT amazing grace , a film about wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
582terms1TERM by the end of the evening , wilberforce had agreed in general terms that he would bring forward the abolition of the slave trade in parliament , " provided that no person more proper could be found " .
583drinking1ACT instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
584shoulders1PERIOD the face and shoulders are painted , while the rest of the portrait contains a sketched outline .
585parliamentary debates1STATE during the frequent government changes of 1781-1784 , wilberforce supported his friend pitt in parliamentary debates .
586subscription1QUALITY in wilberforce 's hometown of hull , a public subscription in 1834 funded the wilberforce monument , a 31-metre ( 102 ft )
587gallery1GOVERNMENT early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
588attempts1ACTION wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
589exertions1AMOUNT let us not despair ; it is a blessed cause , and success , ere long , will crown our exertions .
590george tierney1PERSON he was also opposed to duelling , which he described as the " disgrace of a christian society " and was appalled when his friend pitt engaged in a duel with george tierney in 1798 , particularly as it occurred on a sunday , the christian day of rest .
591farming1QUANTITY william had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
592ministry among jewish people1HUMAN GROUP he was a founding member of the church missionary society ( since renamed the church mission society ) and an early vice-president of the london society for promoting christianity among the jews ( later the church 's ministry among jewish people ) .
593robbers1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
594copy1PERSON see caption diagram of a slave ship , the brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson met with wilberforce for the first time at old palace yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
595ill1PERSON however , in january 1788 , he was taken ill with a probable stress-related condition , now thought to be ulcerative colitis .
596north america1PLACE contemporary evangelical and conservative movements in north america appropriate his name and example in their activism .
597anti abortion activists1PERSON
598army1HUMAN GROUP wilberforce initially strongly opposed bills for catholic emancipation , which would have allowed catholics to become mps , hold public office and serve in the army , although by 1813 , he had changed his views and spoke in favour of a similar bill .
599fontainebleau1PLACE after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
600merchant1PERSON he was the only son of robert wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , elizabeth bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
601story1PERSON in 2007 , focus on the family produced an audio drama called grace victorious : the story of william wilberforce , starring chris larkin as wilberforce .
602course1PERSON william wilberforce by john rising , 1790 , pictured at the age of 30 wilberforce 's spiritual journey is thought to have changed course at this time .
603benjamin franklin1PERSON after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
604goostree1PERSON wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
605lawn1PLACE statue on a lawn of a two-storey georgian house a statue of william wilberforce outside wilberforce house , his birthplace in hull
606languages1LANGUAGE the book was influential and a best-seller ; 7,500 copies were sold within six months , and it was translated into several languages .
607punishments1PERSON wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
608general lafayette1PERSON after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
609needy1PERSON wilberforce was generous with his time and money , believing that those with wealth had a duty to give a significant portion of their income to the needy .
610clergyman sydney smith1PERSON the writer and clergyman sydney smith criticised wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
611progress1EVENT milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist .
612french1PLACE after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
613stance1PROPERTY growing more alarmed , on 31 december 1794 , wilberforce moved that the government seek a peaceful resolution with france , a stance that created a temporary breach in his long friendship with pitt .
614devonshire1PERSON the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
615torrent1EVENT moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
616profits1AMOUNT more recent historians have noted that the sugar industry was still making large profits at the time of the abolition of the slave trade , and this has led to a renewed interest in wilberforce and the evangelicals , as well as a recognition of the anti-slavery movement as a prototype for subsequent humanitarian campaigns .
617humanitarianism1PERSON in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
618wife1PERSON he was the only son of robert wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , elizabeth bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
619home secretary1PERSON henry dundas , as home secretary , proposed a compromise solution of gradual abolition of the trade over several years .
620vote1PERSON with several parliamentarians signalling support for the bill , the opponents of abolition delayed the vote by proposing that the house of commons hear its own evidence ; wilberforce , in a decision that has been criticised for prolonging the slave trade , reluctantly agreed .
621slave1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
622sir charles middleton1PERSON in november 1786 , he received a letter from sir charles middleton that re-opened his interest in the slave trade .
623archbishop1PERSON at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
624abolition movement1HUMAN GROUP the biography was controversial in that the authors emphasised wilberforce 's role in the abolition movement and played down the important work of thomas clarkson .
625negro slaves1PERSON in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
626letters1ABILITY five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
627origin1ARTIFACT from 1816 , wilberforce introduced a series of bills which would require the compulsory registration of enslaved people , together with details of their country of origin , permitting the illegal importation of foreign slaves to be detected .
628long term1TERM
629plan1PLAN the plan was unsuccessful due to lobbying by the directors of the company , who feared that their commercial interests would be damaged .
630supervisor1UNKNOWN james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
631essay1PERSON see caption diagram of a slave ship , the brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson met with wilberforce for the first time at old palace yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
632potential1SET he moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
633hostility1ABSTRACT ENTITY a protracted parliamentary campaign to abolish slavery continued , and wilberforce remained committed to this cause despite frustration and hostility .
634sugar1SUGAR by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
635passages1ACT clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
636distributors1PERSON this and other societies in which wilberforce was a prime mover , mustered support for the prosecution of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws , including brothel keepers , distributors of pornographic material , and those who did not respect the sabbath .
637catholics1UNKNOWN wilberforce initially strongly opposed bills for catholic emancipation , which would have allowed catholics to become mps , hold public office and serve in the army , although by 1813 , he had changed his views and spoke in favour of a similar bill .
638profane1PERSON the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
639invasion1GROUP the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
640approaches1PLACE wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
641pen1PLACE an oil-on-canvas portrait of wilberforce holding a pen .
642petitioners1PERSON petitioners for other causes also besieged him there .
643influenza1UNKNOWN in 1833 , wilberforce 's health declined further and he suffered a severe attack of influenza from which he never fully recovered .
644detail1EVENT drawing on thomas clarkson 's mass of evidence , he described in detail the appalling conditions in which enslaved people travelled from africa in the middle passage and argued that abolishing the trade would also bring an improvement to the conditions of existing slaves in the west indies .
645constitution1PERSON critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
646office1PLACE in office 31 october 1780 -
647fervour1EMOTION influenced by methodist scruples , he initially resisted hull 's lively social life , but , as his religious fervour diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls , and played cards .
648wilberforce colony1PERSON in ontario , canada , the wilberforce colony was founded by black reformers , and inhabited by freed slaves from the united states .
649nova scotia1PERSON inspired in part by the utopian vision of granville sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in sierra leone with black settlers from britain , nova scotia and jamaica , as well as native africans and some whites .
650oil on canvas portrait1PERSON
651states1PLACE wilberforce 's actions led the essayist william hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
652arthur gough calthorpe constituency1PERSON
653critics1PERSON critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
654witnesses1PERSON william wilberforce — speech before the house of commons , 18 april 1791 interrupted by a general election in june 1790 , the committee finished hearing witnesses and in april 1791 , with a closely reasoned four-hour speech , wilberforce introduced the first parliamentary bill to abolish the slave trade .
655samuel wilberforce1PERSON five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
656slavery museum1PLACE wilberforce 's birthplace was acquired by the city corporation in 1903 and , following renovation , wilberforce house in hull was opened as britain 's first slavery museum .
657marie antoinette1UNKNOWN after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
658reforms1AMOUNT in february 1785 , wilberforce returned to london temporarily , to support pitt 's proposals for parliamentary reforms .
659philip doddridge1PERSON milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist .
660organisations1ORGANISATION wilberforce fostered and supported missionary activity in britain and abroad , and was involved with other members of the clapham sect in various evangelical and charitable organisations .
661play1EVENT wilberforce was an indulgent and adoring father who revelled in his time at home and at play with his children .
662spies1RESOURCE after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
663vices1EVENT the writer and clergyman sydney smith criticised wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
664reads1EMOTION an inscription at the bottom reads " " am i not a man and a brother ? "
665genoa1PLACE he rejoined the party in genoa , italy , and they continued their tour to switzerland .
666this country contrasted with real christianity1PERSON to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
667conventions1ACT by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
668breach1ACT growing more alarmed , on 31 december 1794 , wilberforce moved that the government seek a peaceful resolution with france , a stance that created a temporary breach in his long friendship with pitt .
669suspicion1AMOUNT after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
670milner1PERSON in 1767 , he began attending hull grammar school , which at the time was headed by joseph milner , who would become a lifelong friend .
671cambridge signature venerated1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
672attention1PERSON a bill was introduced and approved by the cabinet , and wilberforce and other abolitionists maintained a self-imposed silence , so as not to draw any attention to the effect of the bill .
673contempt1PERSON evangelicals in the upper classes were exposed to contempt and ridicule , and wilberforce 's conversion led him to question whether he should remain in public life .
674garden1PERSON the same year , wilberforce moved his family from clapham to a sizeable mansion with a large garden in kensington gore , closer to the houses of parliament .
675surgeon1PERSON james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
676examinations1PERIOD despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
677rapists1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
678reform wilberforce1PERSON other concerns political and social reform wilberforce was highly conservative on many political and social issues .
679student1PERSON instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
680wilberforce oak1PERSON under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak " at holwood house , pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
681details1EVENT february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
682reform bill1PERSON wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their reform bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
683teachers1PERSON horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
684w. davies1PERSON
685prison reform1AMOUNT wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
686gloucester1PLACE the pallbearers included the duke of gloucester , the lord chancellor henry brougham , and the speaker of the house of commons charles manners-sutton .
687peterloo massacre1ACT he also opposed an enquiry into the 1819 peterloo massacre in which eleven protesters were killed at a political rally demanding reform .
688strategies1STRATEGY the strategies of wilberforce and other abolitionists are invoked by anti-abortion activists , who controversially equate the abolition of slavery with ending abortion .
689acquaintance1WORD it was arranged that bennet langton , a lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of wilberforce and clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 march 1787 to ask wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
690soul1PERSON milner accompanied wilberforce to england , and on the journey they read " the rise and progress of religion in the soul " by philip doddridge , a leading early 18th-century english nonconformist .
691conscience1STATE criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
692guilt1ACT never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
693henry thornton1PERSON he was supported by fellow members of the clapham sect , among whom was his best friend and cousin henry thornton .
694methodist preacher1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
695passing1EVENT on 26 july 1833 , wilberforce heard of government concessions that guaranteed the passing of the bill for the abolition of slavery .
696annum1TIME PERIOD the writer and clergyman sydney smith criticised wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
697actions1ACTION wilberforce 's actions led the essayist william hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
698aspects1PERSON speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
699atlantic1PLACE 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
700six acts1UNKNOWN concerned about " bad men who wished to produce anarchy and confusion " , he approved of the government 's six acts , which further limited public meetings and seditious writings .
701charles fox1PERSON he gave general support to the grenville-fox administration , which brought more abolitionists into the cabinet ; wilberforce and charles fox led the campaign in the house of commons .
702execution1CONDITION in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
703politicians1PERSON the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
704fruits1EVENT this is the first fruits of our efforts ; let us persevere and our triumph will be complete .
705basis1EVENT united kingdom general election , after which he returned to finishing and publishing his letter , a 400-page book which formed the basis for the final phase of the campaign .
706settlers1PERSON inspired in part by the utopian vision of granville sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in sierra leone with black settlers from britain , nova scotia and jamaica , as well as native africans and some whites .
707morning1PERSON the following day he grew much weaker , and he died early on the morning of 29 july at his cousin 's house in cadogan place , london .
708quantities1QUANTITY his regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
709t. cadell1PERSON london : t. cadell and w.
710british east india company1INSTITUTION horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
711career paths1SEQUENCE william had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
712eloquence1QUALITY wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
713edward1PLACE in autumn 1783 , pitt , wilberforce and edward eliot travelled to france for a six-week holiday together .
714action wilberforce1PERSON early parliamentary action wilberforce had planned to introduce a motion giving notice that he would bring forward a bill for the abolition of the slave trade during the 1789 parliamentary session .
715french west indies1PLACE after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
716son william1PERSON in 1826 , wilberforce moved from his large house in kensington gore to hendon park , a more modest property in the countryside of mill hill , north of london , where he was joined by his son william and family .
717canterbury1PLACE at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
718putney1PERSON he attended an " indifferent " boarding school in putney for two years and spent his holidays in wimbledon , where he grew extremely fond of his relatives .
719economics1UNKNOWN in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
720oak tree1TREE the same spring , on 12 may 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce held a conversation with william pitt and the future prime minister william grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on pitt 's estate in kent .
721hinduism1CONCEPT speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
722nonconformist1PERSON wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
723testonites1UNKNOWN he began to read widely on the subject and met with a group of abolitionists called the testonites at middleton 's home in the early winter of 1786-1787 .
724media1MEDIUM in media *
725game laws1PERSON wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
726writer william cobbett1PERSON the radical writer william cobbett was among those who attacked what they saw as wilberforce 's hypocrisy in campaigning for better working conditions for enslaved people while british workers lived in terrible conditions at home .
727british subjects1EVENT a radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban british subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the french colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen .
728industry1INSTITUTION in the 1940s , the role of wilberforce and the clapham sect in abolition was downplayed by historian eric williams , who argued that abolition was motivated not by humanitarianism but by economics , as the west indian sugar industry was in decline .
729encouragement1WORD a proclamation for the encouragement of piety and virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
730funeral wilberforce1PERSON funeral wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at st mary 's church , stoke newington , just north of london .
731abolition bills1DOCUMENT despite this , wilberforce continued to introduce abolition bills throughout the 1790s .
732transgression1PERSON at the time , religious enthusiasm was generally regarded as a social transgression and was stigmatised in polite society .
733disease1DISEASE wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
734evangelical anglican1UNKNOWN in 1785 , he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical anglican , which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform .
735medallion1EVENT medallion created as part of anti-slavery campaign by josiah wedgwood , 1787
736route1ROUTE by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
737triumph1ABSTRACT ENTITY this is the first fruits of our efforts ; let us persevere and our triumph will be complete .
738stoke newington1PERSON funeral wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at st mary 's church , stoke newington , just north of london .
739anglican communion commemorate wilberforce1PERSON various churches within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and wilberforce university in ohio , united states , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
740elizabeth heyrick1PERSON he disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as elizabeth heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in scripture . "
741creatures1ANIMAL already we have gained one victory ; we have obtained , for these poor creatures , the recognition of their human nature , which , for a while was most shamefully denied .
742holwood house1PLACE under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak " at holwood house , pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
743friend thomas babington1PERSON in his youth , william wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend thomas babington recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
744clergy1PERSON he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
745savages1PERSON wilberforce 's actions led the essayist william hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
746revival1PERSON this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
747party man1PERSON free from financial pressures , wilberforce sat as an independent , resolving to be " no party man " .
748dishonour1DEFICIENCY never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
749switzerland1PLACE he rejoined the party in genoa , italy , and they continued their tour to switzerland .
750authors1UNKNOWN the biography was controversial in that the authors emphasised wilberforce 's role in the abolition movement and played down the important work of thomas clarkson .
751virtue1PERSON a proclamation for the encouragement of piety and virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
752business1AMOUNT while tributes were paid and wilberforce was laid to rest , both houses of parliament suspended their business as a mark of respect .
753opponents1PERSON with several parliamentarians signalling support for the bill , the opponents of abolition delayed the vote by proposing that the house of commons hear its own evidence ; wilberforce , in a decision that has been criticised for prolonging the slave trade , reluctantly agreed .
754attitude1ATTITUDE on this occasion and throughout the campaign , abolition was held back by wilberforce 's trusting , even credulous nature , and his deferential attitude towards those in power .
755charles middleton1PERSON in 1787 , wilberforce came into contact with thomas clarkson and a group of activists against the transatlantic slave trade , including granville sharp , hannah more and charles middleton .
756habitué1UNKNOWN wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
757canada1PLACE in ontario , canada , the wilberforce colony was founded by black reformers , and inhabited by freed slaves from the united states .
758dinner party1FORCE it was arranged that bennet langton , a lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of wilberforce and clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 march 1787 to ask wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
759family members1PERSON this left wilberforce with little income , and he was obliged to let his home and spend the rest of his life visiting family members and friends .
760publication1ACTION with the publication of the privy council report in april 1789 and following months of planning , wilberforce commenced his parliamentary campaign .
761task1PROCESS wilberforce responded that he " felt the great importance of the subject , and thought himself unequal to the task allotted to him , but yet would not positively decline it " .
762activism1FORM contemporary evangelical and conservative movements in north america appropriate his name and example in their activism .
763sussex1PERSON in worsening health by 1812 , wilberforce resigned his yorkshire seat , and became mp for the rotten borough of bramber in sussex , a seat with little or no constituency obligations , thus allowing him more time for his family and the causes that interested him .
764bouts1PERIOD his regular bouts of gastrointestinal illnesses precipitated the use of moderate quantities of opium , which proved effective in alleviating his condition , and which he continued to use for the rest of his life .
765quantity1QUANTITY in january 1790 , wilberforce succeeded in speeding up the hearings by gaining approval for a smaller parliamentary select committee to consider the vast quantity of evidence which had been accumulated .
766realm1NUMBER iv , and his estranged wife caroline of brunswick , who had sought her rights as queen of the realm .
767majority1PROPERTY excited supporters suggested taking advantage of the large majority to seek the abolition of slavery itself , but wilberforce made it clear that total emancipation was not the immediate goal .
768county1PLACE when parliament was dissolved in the spring of 1784 , wilberforce decided to stand as a candidate for the county of yorkshire in the 1784 general election .
769sir thomas lawrence1PERSON unfinished portrait by sir thomas lawrence , 1828 wilberforce 's views of women and religion were also conservative .
770bible1PERSON he started to rise early to read the bible and pray and kept a private journal .
771rule1RULE speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
772choir aisle1PERSON this memorial statue , by samuel joseph ( 1791-1850 ) , was erected in 1840 in the north choir aisle .
773itself1UNKNOWN he moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
774aunt hannah1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
775exposition1AGREEMENT this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
776george whitefield1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
777details born1PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
778health issues1EVENT wilberforce played a central role in the campaign for the complete abolition of slavery and continued his involvement after 1826 , when he resigned from parliament because of health issues .
779vanity1ENTITY inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality , use of time , vanity , self-control and relationships with others .
780police suspicion1AMOUNT after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
781churches1PERSON various churches within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and wilberforce university in ohio , united states , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
782election victory1PERSON wilberforce approved of the 1830 election victory of the more progressive whigs , though he was concerned about the implications of their reform bill which proposed the redistribution of parliamentary seats towards newer towns and cities and an extension of the franchise .
783adultery1PERSON wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
784charter act1ACT speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
785london society1INSTITUTION he was a founding member of the church missionary society ( since renamed the church mission society ) and an early vice-president of the london society for promoting christianity among the jews ( later the church 's ministry among jewish people ) .
786mobilisation1ACT later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
787corpus1PLACE critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
788swung1UNKNOWN after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
789landowners1PERSON he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
790charity1PERSON he paid off the debts of others , supported education and missions , and in a year of food shortages , gave to charity more than his own yearly income .
791​ children1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
792politics1ACTION both counselled him to remain in politics , and he resolved to do so " with increased diligence and conscientiousness " .
793anglicanism feast july william wilberforce1PERSON
794petitions1ACT using petitions , meetings , lobbying and letter writing , he successfully campaigned for changes to the charter .
795habits1ACTION his conversion changed some of his habits , but not his nature : he remained outwardly cheerful , interested and respectful , tactfully urging others towards his new faith .
796research1EVENT later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
797abuses1ACT wilberforce 's actions led the essayist william hazlitt to condemn him as one " who preaches vital christianity to untutored savages , and tolerates its worst abuses in civilised states . "
798collection1COLLECTION five years after his death , sons robert and samuel wilberforce published a five-volume biography about their father , and subsequently a collection of his letters in 1840 .
799higher classes1UNKNOWN system of professed christians , in the middle and higher classes in this country , contrasted with real christianity .
800parliamentarian1UNKNOWN under what came to be known as the " wilberforce oak " at holwood house , pitt challenged his friend to give notice of a motion concerning the slave trade before another parliamentarian did .
801enthusiasm1CONDITION at the time , religious enthusiasm was generally regarded as a social transgression and was stigmatised in polite society .
802speaker1PROCESS the pallbearers included the duke of gloucester , the lord chancellor henry brougham , and the speaker of the house of commons charles manners-sutton .
803round1SERIES instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
804figure1FIGURE witty , generous and an excellent conversationalist , wilberforce was a popular figure .
805boy1PERSON wilberforce 's staunchly church of england mother and grandfather , alarmed at these nonconformist influences and at his leanings towards evangelicalism , brought the 12-year-old boy back to hull in 1771 .
806trace1PERSON never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
807rank1RANK he found it difficult to believe that men of rank would not do what he perceived to be the right thing , and was reluctant to confront them when they did not .
808status1STATUS he sought to elevate the status of religion in public and private life , making piety fashionable in both the upper- and middle-classes of society .
809registration bill1PERSON he began using his parliamentary position to advocate reform by introducing a registration bill , proposing limited changes to parliamentary election procedures .
810lord1PERSON lord grenville , the prime minister , successfully introduced an abolition bill in the house of lords first , then charles grey moved for a second reading in the commons on 23 february 1807 .
811revitalisation1UNKNOWN a supporter of the evangelical wing of the church of england , wilberforce believed that the revitalisation of the church and individual christian observance would lead to a harmonious , moral society .
812campaigning1ACTIVITY his underlying conservatism led him to support politically and socially repressive legislation , and resulted in criticism that he was ignoring injustices at home while campaigning for the enslaved abroad .
813landowner1PERSON it was arranged that bennet langton , a lincolnshire landowner and mutual acquaintance of wilberforce and clarkson , would organise a dinner party on 13 march 1787 to ask wilberforce formally to lead the parliamentary campaign .
814georgiana1PERSON the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
815methodist1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
816john newton1PERSON he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
817reformer1PERSON wilberforce has also been described as a humanitarian reformer who contributed to reshaping the political and social attitudes of the time by promoting concepts of social responsibility and action .
818centre1UNKNOWN old palace yard became a centre for the abolitionists ' campaign and the location for many strategy meetings .
819offers1OFFER william had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
820future prime minister william pitt1PERSON he made many friends , including the more studious future prime minister william pitt .
821years wilberforce1PERSON
822clergymen1DEVICE yearly , he gave away thousands of pounds , much of it to clergymen to distribute in their parishes .
823urgings1ACTIVITY despite the urgings of friends to slow down , the couple married at the church of st swithin in bath , somerset , on 30 may 1797 .
824percent1AMOUNT by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
825eradication1ACT his views were often deeply conservative , opposed to radical changes in a god-given political and social order , and focused on issues such as the observance of the sabbath and the eradication of immorality through education and reform .
826burial1ACT however , the leading members of both houses of parliament urged that he be honoured with a burial in westminster abbey .
827products1RESULT by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
828threat1PERSON the outbreak of war with france the same month prevented further consideration of the issue , as politicians concentrated on the national crisis and the threat of invasion .
829revolts1ACT after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
830cotton1ENTITY by 1783 , the triangular route that took british-made goods to africa to buy slaves , transported the enslaved to the west indies , and then brought slave-grown products such as sugar , tobacco , and cotton to britain , represented about 80 percent of great britain 's foreign income .
831goal1GOAL excited supporters suggested taking advantage of the large majority to seek the abolition of slavery itself , but wilberforce made it clear that total emancipation was not the immediate goal .
832film1ARTWORK amazing grace , a film about wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
833dissolute1UNKNOWN the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
834state1STATE he was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
835commons review1ACT in wilberforce 's absence , pitt , who had long been supportive of abolition , introduced the preparatory motion himself , and ordered a privy council investigation into the slave trade , followed by a house of commons review .
836place1PLACE february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
837plantations1QUANTITY ramsay was horrified by the conditions endured by the enslaved peoples , both at sea and on the plantations and returned to england and joined abolitionist movements .
838thomas rowlandson1PERSON final phase of the campaign see caption the house of commons in wilberforce 's day by augustus pugin and thomas rowlandson ( 1808-1811 )
839native1ARTIFACT a native of kingston upon hull , yorkshire , he began his political career in 1780 , and became an independent member of parliament ( mp ) for yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) .
840figurehead1PERSON as the 1820s continued , wilberforce increasingly became more of a figurehead for the abolitionist movement , although he continued to appear at anti-slavery meetings , welcoming visitors , and maintaining a busy correspondence on the subject .
841enforcement1CONDITION emancipation of enslaved africans wilberforce worked with the members of the african institution to ensure the enforcement of the abolition of the slave trade and to promote abolitionist negotiations with other countries .
842lord chancellor henry brougham1PERSON the pallbearers included the duke of gloucester , the lord chancellor henry brougham , and the speaker of the house of commons charles manners-sutton .
843consciousness1STATE abolition continued to be associated in the public consciousness with the french revolution and with british radical groups , resulting in a decline in public support .
844property1PROPERTY in 1826 , wilberforce moved from his large house in kensington gore to hendon park , a more modest property in the countryside of mill hill , north of london , where he was joined by his son william and family .
845ohio1PLACE various churches within the anglican communion commemorate wilberforce in their liturgical calendars , and wilberforce university in ohio , united states , founded in 1856 , is named after him .
846negro1PERSON in 1823 wilberforce 's 56-page " appeal to the religion , justice and humanity of the inhabitants of the british empire in behalf of the negro slaves in the west indies " was published .
847slave population1PERSON he moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
848clubs1GROUP wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
849evangelism1PROCESS horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
850warm1ACT later historians have noted the warm and highly productive relationship between clarkson and wilberforce , and have termed it one of history 's great partnerships : without both the parliamentary leadership supplied by wilberforce and the research and public mobilisation organised by clarkson , abolition could not have been achieved .
851surgeons1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
852grenville fox administration1PERSON
853prototype1DOCUMENT more recent historians have noted that the sugar industry was still making large profits at the time of the abolition of the slave trade , and this has led to a renewed interest in wilberforce and the evangelicals , as well as a recognition of the anti-slavery movement as a prototype for subsequent humanitarian campaigns .
854middle1PERSON british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
855suggestion1SUGGESTION at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
856thornton1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
857commons seats1ABSTRACT ENTITY from the late 1780s onward , wilberforce campaigned for limited parliamentary reform , such as the abolition of rotten boroughs and the redistribution of commons seats to growing towns and cities , though by 1832 , he feared that such measures went too far .
858hero1PERSON as his sons had desired and planned , wilberforce has long been viewed as a christian hero , a statesman-saint held up as a role model for putting his faith into action .
859decades1UNKNOWN wilberforce and clarkson collected a large volume of evidence against the slave trade over the previous two decades , and wilberforce spent the latter part of 1806 writing a letter on the abolition of the slave trade , which was a comprehensive restatement of the abolitionists ' case .
860husband1PERSON the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
861reproduction1RESULT he moved twelve resolutions condemning the slave trade , but did not refer to the abolition of slavery itself , instead dwelling on the potential for reproduction in the existing slave population should the trade be abolished .
862maidstone1UNKNOWN he made a final anti-slavery speech in april 1833 at a public meeting in maidstone , kent .
863proceedings1MEASURE he disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as elizabeth heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in scripture . "
864ladies1GOVERNMENT he disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as elizabeth heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in scripture . "
865protesters1PERSON he also opposed an enquiry into the 1819 peterloo massacre in which eleven protesters were killed at a political rally demanding reform .
866dinners1FOOD they visited the french riviera and had dinners , played cards , and gambled .
867commitment1COMMITMENT the quakers , already working for abolition , recognised the need for influence within parliament , and urged clarkson to secure a commitment from wilberforce to bring forward the case for abolition in the house of commons .
868rev. james ramsay1PERSON
869remedy1STUDY a proclamation for the encouragement of piety and virtue , as a remedy for the rising tide of immorality .
870vision1UNKNOWN inspired in part by the utopian vision of granville sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in sierra leone with black settlers from britain , nova scotia and jamaica , as well as native africans and some whites .
871jamaica1PLACE inspired in part by the utopian vision of granville sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in sierra leone with black settlers from britain , nova scotia and jamaica , as well as native africans and some whites .
872independent1PERSON february 1825 preceded by david hartley succeeded by arthur gough-calthorpe constituency * kingston upon hull ( 1780-1784 ) * yorkshire ( 1784-1812 ) * bramber ( 1812-1825 ) personal details born ( 1759-08-24) 24 august 1759 kingston upon hull , yorkshire , england died 29 july 1833 ( 1833-07-29 ) ( aged 73 ) belgravia , london , england resting place westminster abbey political party independent spouse barbara spooner ​ ( m.
873treason1EVENT the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
874thousands1UNKNOWN yearly , he gave away thousands of pounds , much of it to clergymen to distribute in their parishes .
875diligence1STATE both counselled him to remain in politics , and he resolved to do so " with increased diligence and conscientiousness " .
876silence1PERSON a bill was introduced and approved by the cabinet , and wilberforce and other abolitionists maintained a self-imposed silence , so as not to draw any attention to the effect of the bill .
877education wilberforce1PERSON early life and education wilberforce was born in hull , in yorkshire , england , on 24 august 1759 .
878scandal1PERSON never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
879teachings1ACT this was an exposition of new testament doctrine and teachings and a call for a revival of christianity , as a response to the moral decline of the nation , illustrating his own testimony and the views which inspired him .
880process1PROCESS whig government introduced the bill for the abolition of slavery , formally saluting wilberforce in the process .
881trade petition1ACT the british campaign to abolish the slave trade is generally considered to have begun in the 1780s with the establishment of the quakers ' anti-slavery committees , and their presentation to parliament of the first slave trade petition in 1783 .
882henry alma mater st john1PERSON 1797 ) ​ children 6 , including robert , samuel and henry alma mater st john 's college , cambridge signature venerated in anglicanism feast 30 july william wilberforce ( 24 august 1759 - 29 july 1833 ) was a british politician , philanthropist , and a leader of the movement to abolish the atlantic slave trade .
883ankles1POSITION a black man with shackles around their wrists and ankles is kneeling to the right .
884animal welfare organisation1ORGANISATION with others , wilberforce founded the world 's first animal welfare organisation , the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ( later the royal society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ) .
885higher1UNKNOWN to this end , in april 1797 , wilberforce published a practical view of the prevailing religious system of professed christians in the higher and middle classes of this country contrasted with real christianity , on which he had been working since 1793 .
886students1PERSON instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
887governments1GOVERNMENT criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
888table1DRUG wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
889visitors1PERSON as the 1820s continued , wilberforce increasingly became more of a figurehead for the abolitionist movement , although he continued to appear at anti-slavery meetings , welcoming visitors , and maintaining a busy correspondence on the subject .
890era1ABSTRACT ENTITY by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
891bride1PERSON in his youth , william wilberforce showed little interest in women , but when he was in his late thirties his friend thomas babington recommended 25-year-old barbara ann spooner ( 1771-1847 ) as a potential bride .
892societies1UNKNOWN this and other societies in which wilberforce was a prime mover , mustered support for the prosecution of those who had been charged with violating relevant laws , including brothel keepers , distributors of pornographic material , and those who did not respect the sabbath .
893office october1PERIOD
894prince1PERSON the writer and socialite madame de staël described him as the " wittiest man in england " and , according to georgiana , duchess of devonshire , the prince of wales said that he would go anywhere to hear wilberforce sing .
895emancipationists1PERSON march and 11 june 1824 in which wilberforce made his last speeches in the house of commons , and which again saw the emancipationists outmanoeuvred by the government .
896augustus pugin1PERSON final phase of the campaign see caption the house of commons in wilberforce 's day by augustus pugin and thomas rowlandson ( 1808-1811 )
897murder1ACT the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
898reformers1PERSON in ontario , canada , the wilberforce colony was founded by black reformers , and inhabited by freed slaves from the united states .
899st kitts1PLACE james ramsay , a ship 's surgeon who had become a clergyman and medical supervisor on the island of st christopher ( later st kitts ) .
900importation1PERSON from 1816 , wilberforce introduced a series of bills which would require the compulsory registration of enslaved people , together with details of their country of origin , permitting the illegal importation of foreign slaves to be detected .
901concerns1PERSON other concerns political and social reform wilberforce was highly conservative on many political and social issues .
902posterity1WORD never , never will we desist till we have wiped away this scandal from the christian name , released ourselves from the load of guilt , under which we at present labour , and extinguished every trace of this bloody traffic , of which our posterity , looking back to the history of these enlightened times , will scarce believe that it has been suffered to exist so long a disgrace and dishonour to this country .
903rheims1PLACE after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
904role model1SYSTEM as his sons had desired and planned , wilberforce has long been viewed as a christian hero , a statesman-saint held up as a role model for putting his faith into action .
905tory1PERSON criticised at times for inconsistency , he supported both tory and whig governments according to his conscience , working closely with the party in power , and voting on specific measures according to their merits .
906cadogan place1PLACE the following day he grew much weaker , and he died early on the morning of 29 july at his cousin 's house in cadogan place , london .
907henry dundas1PERSON henry dundas , as home secretary , proposed a compromise solution of gradual abolition of the trade over several years .
908increase1INCREASE after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
909hendon park1PLACE in 1826 , wilberforce moved from his large house in kensington gore to hendon park , a more modest property in the countryside of mill hill , north of london , where he was joined by his son william and family .
910sunday schools1PERSON he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
911mediation attempts1ACTION in 1820 , after a period of poor health and with his eyesight failing , wilberforce further limited public activities , although he became embroiled in unsuccessful mediation attempts between king george
912whirlwind romance1PERSON wilberforce met her two days later on 15 april 1797 , and was immediately smitten ; following an eight-day whirlwind romance , he proposed .
913writings1PROCESS concerned about " bad men who wished to produce anarchy and confusion " , he approved of the government 's six acts , which further limited public meetings and seditious writings .
914paris1PLACE after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
915hometown1EVENT in wilberforce 's hometown of hull , a public subscription in 1834 funded the wilberforce monument , a 31-metre ( 102 ft )
916trade union activity1ACTIVITY wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
917guidance1SPEECH ACT he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
918isaac milner1PERSON in october 1784 , wilberforce embarked upon a tour of europe with his mother , sister and isaac milner , the younger brother of his former headmaster .
919deaths1EVENT the deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
920profanation1UNKNOWN the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
921struggle1FORCE amazing grace , a film about wilberforce and the struggle against the slave trade , was released in 2007 to coincide with the 200th anniversary of parliament 's anti-slave trade legislation .
922registration1PERSON he began using his parliamentary position to advocate reform by introducing a registration bill , proposing limited changes to parliamentary election procedures .
923relationships1RELATIONSHIP inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality , use of time , vanity , self-control and relationships with others .
924privy council investigation1INVESTIGATION in wilberforce 's absence , pitt , who had long been supportive of abolition , introduced the preparatory motion himself , and ordered a privy council investigation into the slave trade , followed by a house of commons review .
925mps1UNKNOWN wilberforce initially strongly opposed bills for catholic emancipation , which would have allowed catholics to become mps , hold public office and serve in the army , although by 1813 , he had changed his views and spoke in favour of a similar bill .
926version1PERMISSION clarkson wrote a book refuting their version of events , and the sons eventually made a half-hearted private apology to him and removed the offending passages in a revision of their biography .
927venture1PERSON william had attempted a series of educational and career paths , and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses , which his father repaid in full , despite offers from others to assist .
928direction1DIRECTION after two evenings of debate , the bill was easily defeated by 163 votes to 88 , as the political climate having swung in a conservative direction after the french revolution and in reaction to an increase in radicalism and to slave revolts in the french west indies .
929textile workers1PERSON wilberforce advocated legislation to improve the working conditions for chimney-sweeps and textile workers , engaged in prison reform , and supported campaigns to restrict capital punishment and the severe punishments meted out under the game laws .
930september1PERIOD in september 1780 , at the age of 21 and while still a student , wilberforce was elected member of parliament for kingston upon hull , spending over £8,000 , as was the custom of the time , to ensure he received the necessary votes .
931mayor1HUMAN ROLE he was twice elected mayor of hull .
932sunday1PERIOD he recognised the importance of education in alleviating poverty , and when hannah more and her sister established sunday schools for the poor in somerset and the mendips , he provided financial and moral support as they faced opposition from landowners and anglican clergy .
933tactics1SEQUENCE a radical change of tactics , which involved the introduction of a bill to ban british subjects from aiding or participating in the slave trade to the french colonies , was suggested by the maritime lawyer james stephen .
934arsonists1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
935portion1PORTION wilberforce was generous with his time and money , believing that those with wealth had a duty to give a significant portion of their income to the needy .
936way1UNKNOWN by the end of his life , british morals , manners , and sense of social responsibility had increased , paving the way for future changes in societal conventions and attitudes during the victorian era .
937six week holiday1PERSON
938tears1PERSON as tributes were made to wilberforce , whose face streamed with tears , the bill was carried by 283 votes to 16 .
939whites1UNKNOWN inspired in part by the utopian vision of granville sharp , they became involved in the establishment in 1792 of a free colony in sierra leone with black settlers from britain , nova scotia and jamaica , as well as native africans and some whites .
940shrimp mount1PLACE wilberforce used his speaking voice to great effect in political speeches ; the diarist and author james boswell witnessed wilberforce 's eloquence in the house of commons and noted , " i saw what seemed a mere shrimp mount upon the table ; but as i listened , he grew , and grew , until the shrimp became a whale . "
941british ships1SHIP british ships dominated the slave trade , supplying french , spanish , dutch , portuguese and british colonies , and in peak years carried forty thousand enslaved men , women and children across the atlantic in the horrific conditions of the middle passage .
942wealth1COLLECTION wilberforce was generous with his time and money , believing that those with wealth had a duty to give a significant portion of their income to the needy .
943conversation1ACTION the same spring , on 12 may 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce held a conversation with william pitt and the future prime minister william grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on pitt 's estate in kent .
944europe1PLACE in october 1784 , wilberforce embarked upon a tour of europe with his mother , sister and isaac milner , the younger brother of his former headmaster .
945vice president1PERSON
946livings1PERSON although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
947court1PERSON after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
948reintroduction1EVENT on its reintroduction during the 1805 session , it was defeated , with even the usually sympathetic pitt failing to support it .
949spirituality1INSTANCE inwardly , he became self-critical , harshly judging his spirituality , use of time , vanity , self-control and relationships with others .
950burglars1PERSON in response to the need for bodies for dissection by surgeons , he brought forward a bill to extend the measure permitting the dissection after execution of criminals such as rapists , arsonists , burglars and violent robbers .
951attack1EVENT in 1833 , wilberforce 's health declined further and he suffered a severe attack of influenza from which he never fully recovered .
952rector1PERSON he sought guidance from john newton , a leading evangelical anglican clergyman of the day and rector of st mary woolnoth .
953shackles1ABSTRACT ENTITY a black man with shackles around their wrists and ankles is kneeling to the right .
954government concessions1PERMISSION on 26 july 1833 , wilberforce heard of government concessions that guaranteed the passing of the bill for the abolition of slavery .
955conscientiousness1STATE both counselled him to remain in politics , and he resolved to do so " with increased diligence and conscientiousness " .
956robert wilberforce1PERSON he was the only son of robert wilberforce ( 1728-1768 ) , a wealthy merchant , and his wife , elizabeth bird ( 1730-1798 ) .
957return1STATEMENT his family opposed a return to hull grammar school because the headmaster had become a methodist , and wilberforce continued his education at pocklington school from 1771 to 1776 .
958clauses1SET horrified by the lack of christian evangelism in india , wilberforce used the 1793 renewal of the british east india company 's charter to propose the addition of clauses requiring the company to provide teachers and chaplains and to commit to the " religious improvement " of indians .
959bachelor1PERSON despite his lifestyle and lack of interest in studying , he managed to pass his examinations and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in 1781 and a master of arts degree in 1788 .
960activity1ACTIVITY wilberforce was opposed to giving workers ' rights to organise into unions , in 1799 speaking in favour of the combination act , which suppressed trade union activity throughout britain , and calling unions " a general disease in our society " .
961child1PERSON wilberforce was a small , sickly and delicate child with poor eyesight .
962anarchy1QUALITY concerned about " bad men who wished to produce anarchy and confusion " , he approved of the government 's six acts , which further limited public meetings and seditious writings .
963frustration1PERSON a protracted parliamentary campaign to abolish slavery continued , and wilberforce remained committed to this cause despite frustration and hostility .
964start1UNKNOWN after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
965persons1PERSON the writer and clergyman sydney smith criticised wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor than those of the rich , and suggested that a better name would be the " society for suppressing the vices of persons whose income does not exceed £500 per annum " .
966world1PLACE with others , wilberforce founded the world 's first animal welfare organisation , the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ( later the royal society for the prevention of cruelty to animals ) .
967scripture1ABSTRACT ENTITY he disapproved of women anti-slavery activists such as elizabeth heyrick , who organised women 's abolitionist groups in the 1820s , protesting : " or ladies to meet , to publish , to go from house to house stirring up petitions— these appear to me proceedings unsuited to the female character as delineated in scripture . "
968prime minister william grenville1PERSON the same spring , on 12 may 1787 , the still hesitant wilberforce held a conversation with william pitt and the future prime minister william grenville as they sat under a large oak tree on pitt 's estate in kent .
969excesses1AMOUNT instead he immersed himself in the social round of student life and pursued a hedonistic lifestyle , enjoying cards , gambling and late-night drinking sessions - although he found the excesses of some of his fellow students distasteful .
970merchant john thornton1PERSON he became interested in evangelical christianity due to his relatives ' influence , especially that of his aunt hannah , sister of the wealthy merchant john thornton , a philanthropist and a supporter of the leading methodist preacher , george whitefield .
971copies1PERSON the book was influential and a best-seller ; 7,500 copies were sold within six months , and it was translated into several languages .
972enquiry1UNKNOWN he also opposed an enquiry into the 1819 peterloo massacre in which eleven protesters were killed at a political rally demanding reform .
973bishop porteus1PERSON at the suggestion of wilberforce and bishop porteus , king george iii was requested by the archbishop of canterbury to issue in 1787
974cambridge friend gerard edwards1PERSON the same year , wilberforce , while dining with his cambridge friend gerard edwards , met rev.
975marble statue1PERSON a marble statue of wilberforce , with an inscription beneath it wilberforce was buried in westminster abbey next to pitt .
976missions1STATE he paid off the debts of others , supported education and missions , and in a year of food shortages , gave to charity more than his own yearly income .
977boodle1MONEY wilberforce attended parliament regularly , but he also maintained a lively social life , becoming an habitué of gentlemen 's gambling clubs such as goostree 's and boodle 's in pall mall , london .
978goals1GOAL moral reform greatly concerned by what he perceived to be the degeneracy of british society , wilberforce was active in matters of moral reform , lobbying against " the torrent of profaneness that every day makes more rapid advances " , and considered this issue and the abolition of the slave trade as equally important goals .
979louis xvi1PERSON after a difficult start in rheims , where their presence aroused police suspicion that they were english spies , they visited paris , meeting benjamin franklin , general lafayette , marie antoinette and louis xvi , and joined the french court at fontainebleau .
980peoples1PERSON ramsay was horrified by the conditions endured by the enslaved peoples , both at sea and on the plantations and returned to england and joined abolitionist movements .
981reprieve1ACT although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
982revolution1STUDY in the meantime , wilberforce and clarkson tried unsuccessfully to take advantage of the egalitarian atmosphere of the french revolution to press for france 's abolition of the trade .
983parliamentary career wilberforce1PERSON early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
984prime1PERSON he made many friends , including the more studious future prime minister william pitt .
985wrists1GROUP a black man with shackles around their wrists and ankles is kneeling to the right .
986debates1STATE early parliamentary career wilberforce began to consider a political career while still at university and during the winter of 1779-1780 , he and pitt frequently watched house of commons debates from the gallery .
987inclination1MEASURE the deaths of his grandfather and uncle , in 1774 and 1777 respectively , had left him independently wealthy and as a result he had little inclination or need to apply himself to serious study .
988lord grenville1PERSON lord grenville , the prime minister , successfully introduced an abolition bill in the house of lords first , then charles grey moved for a second reading in the commons on 23 february 1807 .
989eye problems1PERSON alternatively , wilberforce 's frequent tardiness and disorganisation , as well as his chronic eye problems that at times made reading impossible , may have convinced pitt that he was not ministerial material .
990statesman saint1PLACE
991creation1ACT he was involved in causes and campaigns such as the society for the suppression of vice , british missionary work in india , the creation of a free colony in sierra leone , the foundation of the church mission society and the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals .
992caste system1SYSTEM speaking in favour of the charter act 1813 , he criticised the east india company and their rule in india for its hypocrisy and racial prejudice , while also condemning aspects of hinduism including the caste system , infanticide , polygamy and sati .
993hostilities1ABSTRACT ENTITY he voiced his concern about the war and urged pitt and his government to make greater efforts to end hostilities .
994example1ABSTRACT ENTITY contemporary evangelical and conservative movements in north america appropriate his name and example in their activism .
995daughter1PERSON funeral wilberforce had left instructions that he be buried with his sister and daughter at st mary 's church , stoke newington , just north of london .
996mass1QUANTITY drawing on thomas clarkson 's mass of evidence , he described in detail the appalling conditions in which enslaved people travelled from africa in the middle passage and argued that abolishing the trade would also bring an improvement to the conditions of existing slaves in the west indies .
997speakers1PROCESS critics noted wilberforce 's support of the suspension of habeas corpus in 1795 and his votes for pitt 's " gagging bills " , which banned meetings of more than 50 people , allowing speakers to be arrested and imposing harsh penalties on those who attacked the constitution .
998caption diagram1PLAN see caption diagram of a slave ship , the brookes , illustrating how slaves were transported in early 1787 , thomas clarkson met with wilberforce for the first time at old palace yard and brought a copy of his essay on the subject .
999indifference1DEFICIENCY greeted largely with public indifference , wilberforce sought to increase its impact by mobilising public figures to the cause , and by founding the society for the suppression of vice .
1000abolition bill1PERSON lord grenville , the prime minister , successfully introduced an abolition bill in the house of lords first , then charles grey moved for a second reading in the commons on 23 february 1807 .
1001methodist scruples1QUANTITY influenced by methodist scruples , he initially resisted hull 's lively social life , but , as his religious fervour diminished , he embraced theatre-going , attended balls , and played cards .
1002voices1EVENT he was often distrusted by progressive voices because of his conservatism , and regarded with suspicion by many tories who saw evangelicals as radicals who wanted the overthrow of church and state .
1003reduction1UNKNOWN the bill also advocated the reduction of sentences for women convicted of treason , a crime that at the time included a husband 's murder .
1004lewdness1PROPERTY the proclamation commanded the prosecution of those guilty of " excessive drinking , blasphemy , profane swearing and cursing , lewdness , profanation of the lord 's day , and other dissolute , immoral , or disorderly practices " .
1005professorships1UNKNOWN although he was often months behind in his correspondence , wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships , military promotions and livings for clergymen , or for the reprieve of death sentences .
1006vain1PERSON wilberforce 's attempts to legislate against adultery and sunday newspapers were also in vain ; his involvement and leadership in other , less punitive , approaches were more successful in the long-term , however .
1007right1UNKNOWN a black man with shackles around their wrists and ankles is kneeling to the right .
1008chris larkin1PERSON in 2007 , focus on the family produced an audio drama called grace victorious : the story of william wilberforce , starring chris larkin as wilberforce .
1009government opposition1EVENT members of parliament did not agree , and government opposition in march 1823 stymied wilberforce 's call for abolition .

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daughter
david hartley
death sentences
desire
details born
devonshire
diarist
directors
distributors
duel
duke
dutch
education wilberforce
election
election victory
elizabeth heyrick
emancipationists
england mother
eric williams
essay
essayist william hazlitt
evangelical christianity
evangelicalism
evangelicals
eye problems
face
faith
family fortune
family members
father
favour
fewer
figurehead
foreign slave trade bill
friend
friend pitt
friend thomas babington
friend william pitt
friends
frustration
funeral wilberforce
future prime minister william pitt
game laws
garden
general lafayette
gentlemen
george tierney
george whitefield
georgiana
god
goostree
grace victorious
grandfather
granville sharp
grenville fox administration
hannah more
henry
henry alma mater st john
henry dundas
henry thornton
hero
historians
home secretary
humanitarianism
husband
ill
implications
importation
independent
interest
interests
isaac milner
j. hatchard
jews
john
john newton
joseph milner
josiah wedgwood
journey
karl anton hickel
kensington gore
king george
king george iii
kingston
landowner
landowners
lawyer
lawyer james stephen
leader
leadership
livings
load
lord
lord chancellor henry brougham
lord grenville
lords
losses
louis xvi
man
manners
marble statue
mark
master
matters
member
members
men
merchant
merchant john thornton
methodist
methodist preacher
middle
middle classes
middleton
milner
morning
mother
mp thomas fowell buxton
nation
needy
negro
negro slaves
nonconformist
nova scotia
oil on canvas portrait
oil portrait
old palace yard
opponents
order
pall mall
pallbearers
parliamentary career wilberforce
party man
penalties
peoples
person
persons
petitioners
philanthropist
philip doddridge
piety
pitt
politician
politicians
portrait
prejudice
presentation
prime
prime minister william grenville
prince
privy council report
profane
protesters
punishments
putney
queen
radicalism
radicals
ramsay
rapists
reaction
real christianity
rector
reform bill
reform wilberforce
reformer
reformers
registration
registration bill
relatives
rev. james ramsay
revival
rise
robbers
robert
robert wilberforce
sabbath
samuel
samuel joseph
samuel wilberforce
sati
savages
scandal
sentences
servants
settlers
shrimp
silence
sir charles middleton
sir thomas lawrence
sister
six week holiday
slave
slave population
slave trade
slaves
socialite madame de staël
somerset
son
son william
sons
sons robert
soul
spring
st james
st john
st mary
statue
stoke newington
story
student
students
sunday newspapers
sunday schools
supporter
supporters
surgeon
surgeons
suspension
sussex
t. caddell
t. cadell
teachers
tears
testimony
textile workers
this country contrasted with real christianity
thomas clarkson
thomas rowlandson
thornton
threat
tory
trace
trade
transgression
uncle
vain
venture
vice
vice president
victory
virtue
visitors
vote
w. davies
westminster
westminster abbey
whale
whirlwind romance
wife
wife caroline
wilberforce
wilberforce colony
wilberforce monument
wilberforce oak
william
william pitt
william wilberforce
william wilberforce portrait
williams
wing
winter
wish
witnesses
women
writer
writer william cobbett
years wilberforce
younger
​ children
PLACE
africa
approach
approaches
atlantic
bath
belgravia
britain
brunswick
cadogan place
canada
canterbury
capital punishment
commons
corpus
country
countryside
county
edward
elizabeth
england
europe
fontainebleau
france
french
french revolution
french riviera
french west indies
genoa
gloucester
great britain
hendon park
holwood house
home
house
hull
india
inhabitants
island
italy
jamaica
kent
lawn
london
new testament doctrine
north america
office
ohio
ontario
paris
parishes
pen
place
rheims
sea
shrimp mount
sierra leone
slavery museum
spanish
st christopher
st kitts
st mary woolnoth
st swithin
states
statesman saint
switzerland
united kingdom
united states
wales
west indies
wilberforce house
wimbledon
world
york
yorkshire
yorkshire seat
ACT
abuses
act
blasphemy
breach
burial
catholic emancipation
charter act
combination act
commons review
conventions
creation
criticism
cultivation
decline
drinking
emancipation
eradication
guilt
immorality
instructions
introduction
involvement
laws
legislation
memorials
mobilisation
morals
murder
notice
passage
passages
peterloo massacre
petitions
renewal
renovation
reprieve
restatement
revolts
slave trade act
slavery abolition act
success
support
suppression
teachings
trade legislation
trade petition
tributes
votes
voyage
warm
EVENT
abolition
arts degree
attack
basis
british subjects
character
couple
crime
crisis
death
deaths
detail
details
duchess
events
foundation
fruits
government opposition
health issues
hometown
issue
issues
life
mansion
marriage
medallion
morality
opposition
passing
play
progress
reintroduction
research
respect
student life
subject
torrent
tour
treason
vices
voice
voices
war
PERIOD
april
august
bouts
century
day
days
december
drinking sessions
evening
examinations
february
holidays
january
july
june
march
may
month
months
november
october
office october
parliamentary session
partnerships
peak years
period
prohibition
september
session
shoulders
sunday
time
year
years
youth
INSTITUTION
african institution
anti slavery society
british east india company
church mission society
church missionary society
city corporation
college
company
denounce slavery
east india company
establishment
extension
hull college
hull grammar school
industry
london society
pocklington school
prosecution
royal society
school
service
sierra leone company
slavery
society
university
west indian sugar industry
wilberforce institute
wilberforce memorial school
wilberforce university
STATE
abortion
apology
barbara
british empire
commons debates
conscience
conscientiousness
consciousness
countries
cruelty
debate
debates
diligence
injustices
missions
parliamentary debates
recognition
state
unions
ABSTRACT ENTITY
commons seats
era
evidence
example
hostilities
hostility
journal
labour
meantime
occasion
presence
proposals
ridicule
scripture
seat
seats
shackles
tide
triumph
AMOUNT
business
candidate
consideration
excesses
exertions
parliamentary reform
percent
police suspicion
prison reform
profits
reform
reforms
suspicion
volume
ACTION
action
actions
attempts
conversation
efforts
funeral
habits
impact
mediation attempts
motion
politics
project
publication
ACTIVITY
activities
activity
british missionary work
calendars
campaigning
meeting
meetings
trade union activity
trusting
urgings
work
PROCESS
dissection
education
evangelism
negotiations
overthrow
process
redistribution
speaker
speakers
task
writings
GROUP
cards
clapham sect
clubs
eyesight
group
groups
invasion
view
views
wrists
QUANTITY
career
contact
farming
mass
merits
methodist scruples
plantations
quantities
quantity
traffic
CONDITION
advantage
caption
condition
conditions
disgrace
enforcement
enthusiasm
execution
polygamy
HUMAN GROUP
abolition movement
army
committee
family
ministry among jewish people
movement
parliament
parliamentary select committee
people
PROPERTY
age
health
justice
lewdness
majority
profaneness
property
reading
stance
STUDY
case
climate
remedy
revolution
sins
study
SEQUENCE
biography
british colonies
career paths
colonies
colony
tactics
QUALITY
anarchy
eloquence
importance
inconsistency
poverty
subscription
GOVERNMENT
gallery
government
governments
ladies
minority government
whig governments
MEASURE
inclination
measure
measures
proceedings
while
ENTITY
book
cotton
thing
towns
vanity
RESULT
products
promotions
reproduction
result
tardiness
SERIES
british campaign
campaign
campaigns
round
series
ATTITUDE
attitude
attitudes
conservatism
duty
PLAN
caption diagram
outline
plan
planning
SET
cities
clauses
ethics
potential
DEFICIENCY
confusion
dishonour
food shortages
indifference
DEVICE
clergyman
clergymen
headmaster
DOCUMENT
abolition bills
bills
prototype
SYSTEM
caste system
prevailing religious system
role model
ESTATE
borough
boroughs
estate
ABILITY
abilities
letter
letters
RELATIONSHIP
friendship
relationship
relationships
RESOURCE
column
hypocrisy
spies
COLLECTION
collection
peerage
wealth
WORD
acquaintance
encouragement
posterity
OCCURRENCE
outbreak
pressures
solution
ARTIFACT
native
origin
record
MONEY
boodle
debts
money
SPEECH ACT
conversion
guidance
invitation
SHIP
british ships
ship
ships
PERMISSION
franchise
government concessions
version
FORCE
dinner party
party
struggle
INSTANCE
revision
spirituality
POSITION
ankles
position
DISTANCE
resolution
resolutions
CAUSE
cause
causes
AGREEMENT
exposition
improvement
UNIT
history
pounds
TIME PERIOD
anniversary
annum
FIGURE
figure
figures
TERM
long term
terms
LANGUAGE
atmosphere
languages
RANK
rank
response
ELEMENT
focus
influence
HUMAN ROLE
mayor
prime minister
STYLE
epitaph
inscription
DISEASE
disease
income
SPEECH
speech
speeches
ORGANISATION
animal welfare organisation
organisations
CONCEPT
concepts
hinduism
LOCATION
birthplace
location
EFFECT
conversion experience
effect
DECISION
decision
guilty
STATEMENT
proclamation
return
GOAL
goal
goals
EMOTION
fervour
reads
ANIMAL
animals
creatures
NUMBER
realm
rest
FORM
activism
observance
LAND
abroad
BODY
bodies
USE
use
ILLNESS
illnesses
COGNITIVE STATE
advice
ROUTE
route
POWER
power
VERTEBRATE
humanity
PARTICLE
lifestyle
BIRD
elizabeth bird
STRATEGY
strategies
ROLE
role
INVESTIGATION
privy council investigation
OFFER
offers
BALL
balls
NAME
name
DIRECTION
direction
ABSENCE
absence
HILL
mill hill
INFORMATION
drama
REQUEST
requests
SUBSTANCE
opium
SUGGESTION
suggestion
OBLIGATION
constituency obligations
NATURE
nature
STAGE
stages
STATUS
status
ARTWORK
film
ASSET
prevention
SIMILARITY
correspondence
BUILDING
building
PORTION
portion
MATERIAL
material
COMMITMENT
commitment
PROCEDURE
election procedures
RESPONSIBILITY
responsibility
INCREASE
increase
FOOD
dinners
SIGN
thirties
MEDIUM
media
LIQUID
whigs
SUGAR
sugar
RULE
rule
TREE
oak tree
DRUG
table