A Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade / Addressed to the freeholders and other inhabitants of Yorkshire
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About This Book
The pamphlet assembles factual evidence and moral argumentation to urge ending the transatlantic slave trade. Drawing on reports, testimonies, and statistics, the author details how captives are procured in Africa, the brutal middle passage, and the degrading abuses on plantations that reduce population and punish humanity. Common objections are answered: claims of racial inferiority, supposed benefits to African societies, and economic or naval harms are examined and rebutted with empirical and moral reasoning. The text contrasts immediate abolition with gradual schemes, argues that reform of abuses would allow natural increase, and anticipates political and religious counterarguments while outlining expected humanitarian and commercial consequences.
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