Higher Migration and Empire - Push factors (Highlands)
Atlantic Slave Trade - anti abolitionists
1.
2.
3. LEARNING INTENTIONS
• Describe arguments given in favour of the slave trade
continuing
• Describe ways that anti-abolitionists campaigned for
slavery
4. Although some people in Britain opposed slavery, many other
people wanted to see it continue. They believe it benefitted the
country and so should not be abolished.
5. Many people in Britain
supported the slave trade.
This included merchants and
politicians in cities which
relied on money raised.
It also included the King,
British government and the
Church of England.
6. Just like the abolition
movement, those in favour
of slavery had their own
arguments.
These arguments centred
around money and also the
power anti-abolitionists felt
that slavery gave Britain.
7. Economic arguments
Pro-slavery campaigners said
that slavery had helped make
a lot of tax money for Britain.
Abolishing it would lose this.
Rich individuals such as
Thomas Leyland also
opposed ending the trade.
8. Anti-abolitionist also argued
that without slavery the
sugar trade would collapse,
meaning no sugar.
They pointed that thousands
of Britons had jobs which
depended on slavery and
they would be unemployed
without it.
9. Military arguments
Britain had a strong military
because of the experience that
sailors gained on slave ships,
and also the expertise it gave
in shipbuilding.
Britain also needed slave
money to fund the wars with
France (from 1792).
10. Moral arguments
Anti-abolitionists argued that
Africans were inferior (not
human), meaning slavery was
justified in God’s eyes.
They also claimed that slaves
were happier living as
Christians and were well
treated.
11. Religious arguments
The Church of England
owned plantations in the
Caribbean and so opposed the
trade’s abolition.
Some religious people argued
that the Bible in fact allowed
slavery to exist.
12. Those in favour of slavery
campaigned in similar ways
to the abolition movement.
They set up campaign groups
to oppose the end of slavery.
Anti-abolitionists also sent
petitions to parliament and
gained support from MPs
(sometimes through bribes).
13. Groups were set up in Africa and
the Caribbean to argue for the
continuation of slavery.
They sent letters to newspapers
and also suggested that British
workers would be poorer and the
country less safe without slavery.
Pamphlets and leaflets were
published using the same
arguments.