| St John's Library/Clarkson/Folder 1-5 contains: |
| <-- See earlier |
| Doc 13 |
Autograph letter, signed, from Brissot de Warville, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 14 |
Autograph letter, signed, from Brissot de Warville, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 15 |
Autograph letter, signed, from Brissot de Warville, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 16 |
Autograph letter, signed, from Brissot de Warville, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 17 |
Autograph letter, signed, in French, from P. Lepage, Treasurer of the Societe des Amis des Noirs, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 18 |
Autograph letter, signed, in French, from Francois Lanthenas, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Doc 19 |
Autograph letter, signed, from Thomas Clarkson, to Joseph Taylor, Scarborough |
| Doc 20 |
Photocopy of autograph letter, signed, recipient unknown (? John Wadkin), from Thomas Clarkson |
| Doc 21 |
Photocopy of autograph letters, signed, to John Wadkin from Thomas Clarkson, from London |
| Doc 22 |
Photocopy of autograph letter, signed, to John Wadkin from Thomas Clarkson, from London |
| Doc 23 |
Photocopy of autograph letter, signed, to John Wadkin from Thomas Clarkson, from London |
| See later --> |
|
Papers of Thomas Clarkson
| Title |
Autograph letter, signed, in French, from Francois Lanthenas, to Thomas Clarkson, from Paris |
| Reference |
Doc 18 |
| Covering Dates |
16 January 1796 |
| Extent and Medium |
4p; paper |
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| Content and context |
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The writer excuses lack of correspondence on the subject of abolition by attention to urgent political matters. The victory achieved by the 'gens de couleur' over the whites in the French colonies, on behalf of which the Societe des Amis des Noirs had merely a propaganda role in Paris, will perhaps hasten the winning of equal rights for all men everywhere. He trusts that that class of oppressed citizens who owe their triumph to the philosophy of the present age, will acknowledge it by giving support to the Societe particularly devoted to the betterment of the condition of their brothers, the Africans (1). Lanthenas considers the opening of new colonies an opportunity to give support to the cause there. He endeavours to interest Clarkson in a new publishing and bookselling venture established at No. 4 Rue du Theatre Francois, which will begin by publishing the evidences submitted to the English Parliament against the slave trade. It is intended to revivify the Societe. (1) This is just the kind of platitude that Lubersac was inveighing against in November 1789.
Bought from R. Myers & Co., 1949.
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| Index Terms |
| Clarkson, Thomas (1760-1846) slavery abolitionist |
| No further on-line information. |
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