The Slave Trade and Abolition
Research into the impact of the slave trade and its abolition.
Here we look at Yorkshire's part in the British slave trade and the impact left in our historic environment.
Listed Grade I
Henry Lascelles (from 1690 to 1753) was a banker and sugar importer who held shares in 21 ships involved in the slave trade between Barbados and Africa. He bought land in Yorkshire with the fortune he amassed.
In 1759 his son Edwin Lascelles, Baron Harewood (from 1712 to 1795), laid the foundation stone of Harewood House, Harewood, Leeds LS17 9LG. With the Lascelles fortune at his disposal Edwin Lascelles was able to commission the top talents of the day to design Harewood, including John Carr, Robert Adam and Sir Charles Barry.
Listed Grade II
In 1820 James Wilson (birth unknown, died in 1830) bought Sneaton Castle, Whitby, Yorkshire YO21 3QN. Wilson also owned a sugar plantation in St Vincent, where in 1827 he employed 231 'negroes'.
In Whitby he set out to be a pillar of the community. In 1823 he rebuilt the church of St Hilda in Sneaton and between 1826 and 1830 was MP for nearby York. In his first Parliamentary speech he opposed the immediate emancipation of enslaved people.
Sneaton Castle is now a conference centre.
Find out more about the role Britain played in the slave trade and the people involved.
London's part in the British slave trade and the impact left in our historic environment.
Bristol and the South West's part in the British slave trade and the legacy remaining in our historic environment.
Liverpool and the North West's part in the British slave trade and the impact left in our historic environment.
Yorkshire's part in the British slave trade and the impact left in our historic environment.
The Midland's part in the British slave trade and the impact left in our historic environment.
Research into the impact of the slave trade and its abolition.
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