National Portrait Gallery Logo - link to our homepage NPG nav image for Monday
National Portrait Gallery Homepage Search The Collection What's On? About the Gallery
Visitor Information National Portrait Gallery Around the Country Search the Website
Education Research Publications Picture Library Gift & Bookshop Membership Sponsorship Venue Hire Press
You are in National Portrait Gallery | Education | e-Learning | Abolition
Educationregister for our e-newsletter
Abolition Trail
The Slave Trade
After Abolition
Slavery today
The Anti-Slavery Society Convention (NPG 599)
The Artist
The Portrait
The Slave Trade
Abolition
Who is Who
Resources

Introduction

Is it not enough that we are torn from our country and friends, to toil for your luxury and lust of gain? Must every tender feeling be likewise sacrificed to your avarice? ... Why are parents to lose their children, brothers their sisters, husbands their wives?
Olaudah Equiano (also known as Gustavus Vassa), (c.1745-1797), anti-slavery campaigner author of The Interesting Narrative and slavery abolitionist

2007 marks the 200th anniversary of the passing of the Act of Parliament that legally ended British involvement in the transatlantic trade in African people to serve as slave labour in the Americas, the West Indies and Europe. This Act did not end slavery in the British Empire, nor did it end the involvement of British companies in the slave trade. 1807 did, however, mark the moment when men and women - privileged and poor, enslaved and free - celebrated their initial success against a barbaric trade.

To commemorate this anniversary the National Portrait Gallery has created a new gallery trail that highlights some of the individuals in the Collection who have been associated with the history of the slave trade. It mainly includes those who profited from the trade in enslaved peoples, reflecting the reliance on slave labour to create wealth, position and influence in British society. It also brings together those who suffered and survived the cruelties and indignities of transportation and those who fought slavery, with those who were present in Britain due to its lasting legacies. There are many others who are a part of this story but remain unknown, although not forgotten, such as the young girl who appears in this portrait, and the many ordinary working men and women who took part in the nation-wide abolition campaign.

This trail has been researched and written for the National Portrait Gallery by Dr Caroline Bressey, University College, London.


home | search the collection | what's on? | about the gallery | visitor information | npg around the country | search the website
education | research | publications | picture library | gift & bookshop | membership | sponsorship | venue hire | press

Betsie icon Go to a large print, text-only
version of this site

All images and text are subject to copyright protection. 13 October 2008


Comments and suggestions

National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London WC2H 0HE. Tel: 020 7306 0055