JKB James Stephen was born to James Stephen and Sibella Stephen (née Milner). and was
called to the bar there in 1782. His father had earlier been a member of the
Middle Temple but was expelled before being called to the bar. James also read law at
Marischal College, Aberdeen, for two years but ended his studies due to a lack of money. The following year he sailed with his family to the
West Indies, where they would live for the next 11 years. Stephen set up in practice as a lawyer there, becoming
solicitor-general of
St. Kitts, at that time a British colony. During a visit to
Barbados, he witnessed the trial of four black slaves for murder. The trial, which found the men guilty as charged, was considered by many to be a grave
miscarriage of justice. The men were sentenced to
death by burning, and Stephens' revulsion at both the trial and the verdict led him to vow never to keep slaves himself, and to ally himself with the abolitionist movement. Stephen opposed the opening up of
Trinidad through the use of
slave labour when the island was
ceded to the British in 1797, recommending instead that Crown land should only be granted for estates that supported the immigration of free Africans. He considered that, besides the evangelical arguments in support of freedom from slavery, internal security, particularly from potential French interests, could be obtained in the British West Indian islands by improving the conditions of slaves. Stephen was a skilled lawyer whose speciality was the laws governing Great Britain's foreign trade. He was a defender of the
mercantilist system of government-licensed controlled trade. In October 1805 – the same month that the British fleet under
Lord Nelson defeated the French fleet – his book appeared:
War in Disguise; or, the Frauds of the Neutral Flags. It called for the abolition of neutral nations' carrying trade, meaning America's carrying trade, between
France's Caribbean islands and Europe, including Great Britain. Stephen's arguments two years later became the basis of Great Britain's
Orders in Council, which placed restrictions on American vessels. The enforcement of this law by British warships eventually led to the
War of 1812, even though the Orders were repealed in the same month that America declared war, unbeknown to the
American Congress. ==Abolitionism==