An active Member of Parliament from 1857, Charles Buxton (1822-1871) was the third son of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, a well-known and popular philanthropist (several of whose books are reissued in this collection). Buxton inherited his father's interest in social welfare. He owned property in Co. Kerry, Ireland, and became a strong advocate for reform of the Irish Church, and the introduction of a national education system. Buxton also followed his father in supporting the anti-slavery movement. He published this short work in 1860 in response to critics of the abolition of slavery. He argues that abolition in the British West Indies had brought prosperity to that region, and had also fostered the advance of missionary work and Christian civilisation in West Africa.
Slavery and Freedom in the British West Indies is a historical book written by Charles Roden Buxton in 1860. The book provides a detailed account of the abolition of slavery in the British West...
Written in 1823, this book argues against the idea that slavery is a necessary institution for the British colonies in the West Indies. Drawing upon moral, economic, and political arguments, Veritas...