Samuel Oughton's work for the
Baptist Missionary Society in Jamaica soon became well known. Arriving in 1836 from the Surrey Chapel in London, his posting was initially to help
Thomas Burchell, a relative by marriage. However, by 1839 he was invited by the largely African congregation in Kingston to be their pastor at the prominent East Queen Street chapel. This was a key time in the emancipation of Jamaican slaves. After "legal abolition" began in Jamaica with the home government's
Slavery Abolition Act 1833, conditions were little better for many Africans in Jamaica for some decades; particularly under the dreaded "indentured apprenticeship" system of forced labour, which was taken to extremes by the Planters, some masters and their overseers compelling the use of treadmills. The abuses of indentured apprenticeship were finally abolished on 1 August 1838, following a campaign led by
Joseph Sturge, with support from the Baptists, the
Society for the Mitigation and Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions (Anti-Slavery Society 1823–1838), and longstanding abolitionists such as
William Allen. Even so, emancipation was no paradise; the planters frequently harassed tenants (see
Free Villages) and sought to drive down wages when they could. Oughton once famously remarked to his flock in the parish of Hanover: For a time (during 1840) he was imprisoned by the Jamaican authorities for his outspoken views against liberties being taken by magistrates against African women. Back in Britain,
Joseph Sturge of the
British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society (Anti-Slavery Society founded 1839) passed on Oughton's descriptions of the horrendous labour practices suffered by Africans in Jamaica, which Oughton continued to communicate whilst in prison.
Joseph Sturge made representations to the Colonial Office on his behalf and Samuel Oughton was eventually discharged after a period released on bail. He records "simple but ardent expressions of delight and affection" from "our poor dear people", who welcomed him back to East Queen Street chapel with renewed hope. In 1841 Oughton was able to write: "my affection for the people, and theirs for me, seems to grow stronger by the day". The Baptist returns at about this date show Samuel Oughton, assisted by George Rowse, to be responsible for three "sub stations", two "day schools", two "Sunday schools", and, besides Rowse, two further teachers – Miss Simpson and W. Spraggs. ==Oughton's moral code==