's
Candide and Cacambo meeting a maimed slave near
Suriname. The caption says, "It is at this price that you eat sugar in Europe". The slave who utters the remark has had his hand cut off for getting a finger stuck in a millstone, and his leg cut off for trying to run away. In 1787,
Thomas Clarkson,
Granville Sharp, and other abolitionists founded the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, considering the termination of the transatlantic slave trade a necessary precursor to the complete abolition of slavery. The society employed various methods to advance its cause, including the dissemination of firsthand accounts from formerly enslaved individuals such as
Olaudah Equiano, the promotion of consumer boycotts against goods produced by enslaved labor, and the organization of petitions directed at the British Parliament. The institution of Black slavery was first
abolished by the French Republic in 1794, but
Napoleon revoked that decree in 1802. On 29 March 1815, Napoleon abolished the slave trade but the decree did not come into effect until 1826. France re-abolished the institution of slavery in its colonies in 1848 with a general and unconditional emancipation.
Haiti became the first country to abolish slavery following the colony of
Saint Domingue's independence from
France on 1 January 1804 after the
Haitian Revolution had ended by the
Declaration of Independence where Haiti became the world's first and oldest free black-led republic in the modern era which was the only black nation to free itself from French rule.
William Wilberforce's
Slave Trade Act 1807 abolished the trafficking of slaves in the British Empire. It was not until the
Slavery Abolition Act 1833 that the institution was finally abolished, but on a gradual basis. Since slave owners in the various colonies (not only the Caribbean) were losing their unpaid labourers, the government set aside £20 million for compensation but it did not offer the former slaves any reparations. The colony of
Trinidad was left with a shortage of labour. This shortage became worse after the abolition of the institution of slavery in 1833. To deal with this, plantation owners on Trinidad transported
indentured servants from the 1810s until 1917. Initially
Chinese people, free
West African people, and
Portuguese people from the island of
Madeira were imported, but they were soon supplanted by
Indian people who started arriving from 1845. Indentured Indians would prove to be an adequate alternative for the plantations that formerly relied upon slave labour. In addition, numerous former slaves migrated from the
Lesser Antilles to Trinidad to work. In 1811 on the island of
Tortola in the
British Virgin Islands,
Arthur William Hodge, a wealthy slaveholder, plantation owner and Council member, became the first person to be hanged for the
murder of an enslaved person. In 1833, the
British Parliament passed the
Slavery Abolition Act, permanently abolishing the instutiton of slavery in Britain's overseas colonies. The Act also stipulated that all formerly enslaved people would undergo a system of
apprenticeship whereby they would work for their former owners for a period of time; how long this would last would be up to the government authorities in each British colony. On 1 August 1834 in Trinidad, an unarmed group of mainly elderly Black people being addressed by the Governor at Government House about the new apprenticeship laws, began chanting: "
Pas de six ans. Point de six ans" ("Not six years. No six years"), drowning out the voice of the Governor. Peaceful protests continued until a resolution to abolish "apprenticeship" was passed and
de facto freedom was achieved. This made Trinidad the first British colony with a slave population to completely abolish the institution of slavery. The successful resistance of the implementation of the full six-year term of the Apprenticeship system and Abolition of Slavery in Trinidad was marked by ex-slaves and free people of colour joining in celebrations through the streets in what became known as their annual
Canboulay celebrations. This event in Trinidad influenced full
emancipation in the other British colonies which was legally granted two years ahead of schedule on 1 August 1838. After Great Britain abolished the institution of slavery, it began to pressure other nations to do the same. France abolished the institution of slavery in 1848, in its colonies of
Guadeloupe,
Martinique,
French Guiana and
Réunion. ==See also==