In this Book

Let This Voice Be Heard: Anthony Benezet, Father of Atlantic Abolitionism

Book
Maurice Jackson
2010
summary

Anthony Benezet (1713-84), universally recognized by the leaders of the eighteenth-century antislavery movement as its founder, was born to a Huguenot family in Saint-Quentin, France. As a boy, Benezet moved to Holland, England, and, in 1731, Philadelphia, where he rose to prominence in the Quaker antislavery community.

In transforming Quaker antislavery sentiment into a broad-based transatlantic movement, Benezet translated ideas from diverse sources—Enlightenment philosophy, African travel narratives, Quakerism, practical life, and the Bible—into concrete action. He founded the African Free School in Philadelphia, and such future abolitionist leaders as Absalom Jones and James Forten studied at Benezet's school and spread his ideas to broad social groups. At the same time, Benezet's correspondents, including Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin Rush, Abbé Raynal, Granville Sharp, and John Wesley, gave his ideas an audience in the highest intellectual and political circles.

In this wide-ranging intellectual biography, Maurice Jackson demonstrates how Benezet mediated Enlightenment political and social thought, narratives of African life written by slave traders themselves, and the ideas and experiences of ordinary people to create a new antislavery critique. Benezet's use of travel narratives challenged proslavery arguments about an undifferentiated, "primitive" African society. Benezet's empirical evidence, laid on the intellectual scaffolding provided by the writings of Hutcheson, Wallace, and Montesquieu, had a profound influence, from the high-culture writings of the Marquis de Condorcet to the opinions of ordinary citizens. When the great antislavery spokesmen Jacques-Pierre Brissot in France and William Wilberforce in England rose to demand abolition of the slave trade, they read into the record of the French National Assembly and the British Parliament extensive unattributed quotations from Benezet's writings, a fitting tribute to the influence of his work.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title

pp. iii

Copyright

pp. iv

Contents

pp. vii

Introduction

pp. ix-xv

1. A Life of Conscience

pp. 1-30

2. The Early Quaker Antislavery Movement

pp. 31-56

3. An Antislavery Intellect Develops

pp. 57-70

4. Visions of Africa

pp. 72-107

5. Building an Antislavery Consensus in North America

pp. 108-137

6. Transatlantic Beginnings and the British Antislavery Movement

pp. 138-167

7. Benezet and the Antislavery Movement in France

pp. 168-186

8. African Voices

pp. 187-210

Epilogue: Benezet’s Dream

pp. 211-230

Chronology of Atlantic Abolitionism

pp. 231-253

Notes

pp. 255-350

Primary Sources

pp. 351-352

Index

pp. 353-370

Acknowledgments

pp. 371-374

Illustrations

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