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122:. He wished to see his family again but this feeling was dampened by the idea of returning to a land of slaves. But he came back, and stayed. In a letter to an abolitionist friend he wrote, “it will be my great objective to encourage the extensive propagation of our religion among the negroes, as well as to improve the impression which has already been made on the white inhabitants. It ought indeed to be considered disgraceful to the policy of any society, that the space of nearly three centuries should have expired since one people or other, professing civilization and Christianity, have made but feeble efforts, or rather no efforts, for the extension of their blessings among the laborious and ignorant”.
115:, a lawyer. Both these men were so outspoken in their abhorrence of slavery that after much persecution from other members of the plantocracy they were forced to leave the island; but not before they had been able over a long period to send detailed accounts of the ill treatment of slaves in the two islands to Wilberforce and other abolitionists fighting for the cause in England. Events in these two small islands became very influential in determining the final victory for abolition.
130:, the Bishop of London, Davis was slowly able to make progress. By 1822 there were Sunday schools in every parish in Nevis. Slaves on enlightened plantations were allowed markets on days other than Sundays that had otherwise prevented them from attending church. But above all Davis had begun to win the support of a growing number of planters to the cause of conversion. Towards the end of 1821
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But it was not to be an easy ministry. He found that neither planters nor their field slaves were much interested in his invitations to come for worship and instruction. It was not until 1818 that, under the pressure of the ameliorative policies of the
British government, local political circles
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By the time Davis left the island for St Kitts 19 schools with an aggregate attendance of 1,247 slave pupils had been established; and just before his departure he founded, along with those who supported his views, a branch society of the
Society for the Conversion of Slaves. The most active
153:). This was a signal to the local plantocracy that the British government was now fully committed to the policy of improving the condition of slaves in its colonies and was conscious that full freedom could not be very long delayed.
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He found that St Kitts and Nevis were playing a part on behalf of the abolitionists out of all proportion to their size and importance. This was due to two prominent residents of St Kitts,
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180:. Fierce to the end in attacking racial prejudice from whatever quarter it appeared, Davis died in London, aged 70, in 1857.
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were forced to accept that attitudes had changed back in
Britain. With the help of the vigorous leadership in the church of
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By 1812 when he was ordained Davis was in two minds whether to take up the rectorship he had been offered of St. Paul’s,
134:, a former President of the Island Council and a prominent planter, came forward with a proposal to build this church.
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In 1824 two
Bishops (known for their opposition to slavery) were appointed for the newly created Sees of Jamaica (
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Hubbard, Vincent K. 2002. "Swords, Ships & Sugar". Premiere
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Daniel Davis was born in 1788, the youngest of six children of
William and Anne Davis of
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Davis remained in St Kitts until 1838 and later became the first
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in 1808. There he became an abolitionist and a friend of
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84:and worked strongly, but quietly, for abolition in
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381:Alumni of Pembroke College, Oxford
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66:Pembroke College, Oxford
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53:Early life
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