meeting of 1 June 1840. The expedition was put into motion by an
Exeter Hall meeting of 1 June 1840. It was chaired by
Prince Albert. The organisers were the
Society for the Extinction of the Slave Trade and for the Civilization of Africa, set up in 1839 by
Thomas Fowell Buxton. Buxton was promoting a grandiose "New Africa" policy, based on a series of treaties to be made in
West Africa, the introduction of Christianity, and increased commerce, as set out in his book the previous year. Buxton's ideas went back at least half a century, to the
Sierra Leone Company. At the time anti-slavery activists had little access to the higher reaches of the British government, and were relying on public meetings and popular agitation; Buxton was in an exceptional position. Up to 4,000 people attended the meeting, Sir
Robert Peel spoke from the stage, and Prince Albert became President of the Society. The proceedings were written up by
Joseph Beldam. The Whig government of the time, under
Lord Melbourne, was more irritated than pleased by Buxton's lobbying. But it made financial moves to support the expedition.
Lord Palmerston as Foreign Secretary found £50,000 to offer Spain for their claimed sovereignty of Fernando Po (now
Bioko), an island in the region already home to British naval bases. ==History==