1807, Sierra Leone. Medallic Copper "Abolition of Slave Trade" Penny. NGC MS-62!

Medallist: G.F. Pigeon
Issuer: Macaulay & Babington.
Mint Place. Soho mint, Birmingham, UK.
Mint Year: dated 1807, struck ca. 1814.
Condition: Certified and graded by NGC as MS-62!
References: Eimer 984, Vice 1, KM-Tn1.1 (listed under Sierra Leone).
Denomination: Medallic Penny Token - Abolition of Slave Trade by Great Britain, during 1807.
Weight: ca. 17.5gm
Material: Copper
Diameter: 36mm

Obverse: A British officer with left hand on his chest clasping hands with a freed half-nude slave. Medallist´s signature (G.F.P.) below. Tropical landscape in background with fenced cottages and two agricultural workers in field to left and five nude male figures dancing around a tree to right.
Legend: WE ARE ALL BRETHREN
Exergue: SLAVE TRADE ABOLISHED BY GREAT BRITAIN 1807

Reverse:Arabic inscription in six lines with a separating line and palm-sprays in saltuer. Medallist´s signature (J.P.FECIT) below.
Legend (translated): "Sale of slaves prohibited in 1807, Christian era, in the reign on George the Third. Verily, we are all brothers."

The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, (or The Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade), was a British abolitionist group, formed on 22 May 1787, when twelve men gathered together at a printing shop in London, England.

The first anti-slavery statement by Dutch and German Quakers was signed at Germantown, Pennsylvania in 1688. Following this, English Quakers had begun to express their official disapproval of the slave trade since 1727 and promote reforms. From the 1750s, a number of Quakers in Britain's American colonies also began to oppose slavery, calling on English Quakers to take action, and encourage their fellow citizens, including Quaker slave owners, to improve conditions for slaves, educate their slaves in Christianity, reading and writing, and gradually emancipate them.

An informal group of six Quakers pioneered the British abolitionist movement in 1783 when the London Society of Friends' yearly meeting presented its petition against the slave trade to parliament,   signed by over 300 Quakers. They subsequently decided to form a small,   committed, non-denominational group so as to gain greater Anglican and Parliamentary support.

The new, non-denominational committee formed in 1787 had nine Quaker members (who, as non-conformists, were debarred from standing for Parliament), and three Anglicans, whose support strengthened the committee's likelihood of influencing Parliament.

Nine of the twelve founding members of the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade were Quakers: John Barton; William Dillwyn; George Harrison; Samuel Hoare Jr; Joseph Hooper; John Lloyd; Joseph Woods Sr; James Phillips; and Richard Phillips. Five of the Quakers had been amongst the informal group of six Quakers   who had pioneered the movement in 1783 when the first petition against   the slave trade was presented to parliament.

Three Anglicans co-founded the committee, Thomas Clarkson,campaigner and author of an influential essay against the slave trade, Granville Sharp who, as a lawyer, had long been involved in the support and prosecution of cases on behalf of enslaved Africans, and Philip Sansom.

Women had increasingly played a larger role in the anti-slavery movement but were not eligible to be represented in Parliament and often, in the manner of the times, had to form their own separate   societies. Many women were horrified that women and children were taken   away from their families. In 1824, Elizabeth Heyrick published a pamphlet titled Immediate not Gradual Abolition. In this Heyrick urged the immediate emancipation of the slaves. The Anti-Slavery Society had been founded to promote gradual abolition and though dominated by   members with this view, who sought to downplay the challenge, a ginger group of members formed to campaign for immediate progress. The Female   Society for Birmingham had a network of women's anti-slavery groups and   Heyrick's pamphlet was publicized here.

The mission of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade was to inform the public of the inhuman and immoral treatment of enslaved Africans committed in the name of slavery, to campaign in favour of a new law to abolish the slave trade and enforce this on the high seas, and to establish areas in West Africa where Africans could live free of the risk of capture and sale into   slavery. It pursued these proposals vigorously by writing and publishing   anti-slavery books, abolitionist prints, posters and pamphlets, and organizing lecture tours in the towns and cities of England.

Petitions were presented to the House of Commons, anti-slavery rallies held, and a range of anti-slavery medallions, crockery and bronze figurines were made, notably with the support of the Unitarian Josiah Wedgwood whose production of pottery medallions featuring a slave in chains with the simple but effective question: Am I not a man and a brother? was very effective in bringing public attention to abolition. The Wedgwood medallion was the most famous image of a black person in all of 18th-century art. Thomas Clarkson wrote; "ladies wore them in bracelets, and others had them fitted up in   an ornamental manner as pins for their hair. At length the taste for   wearing them became general, and thus fashion, which usually confines   itself to worthless things, was seen for once in the honourable office   of promoting the cause of justice, humanity and freedom".

By informing the public, the Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade gained many members. Public interest was generated immediately after the Committee formed, in 1787, by Thomas Clarkson's tour of the great ports and cities of England. Very shortly the public mood was further aroused by the work of the African Olaudah Equiano, whose autobiography demonstrated both literary skill and an unanswerable case against   slavery. In 1789 Clarkson was able to promote the Committee's cause by   encouraging the sale of Equiano's first-hand account of the slave trade   and slavery abroad, and his visits to British ports linked to the trade.

William Wilberforce introduced the first Bill to abolish the slave trade in 1791, which was   easily defeated by 163 votes to 88. As Wilberforce continued to bring   the issue of the slave trade before Parliament, Clarkson and others on   the Committee continued to travel, raise funds, lobby, and to write   anti-slavery works. This was the beginning of a protracted parliamentary   campaign, during which Wilberforce introduced a motion in favour of   abolition almost every year.

Even with all of this support, it took twenty years of work by the   Society, and others - including captive and freed Africans, missionaries   and evangelical movements in the colonies - to achieve the first stage   of legal emancipation in the colonies. Over the course of this period   membership of the Committee came to include the Quaker philanthropist William Allen, who worked closely with Wilberforce, and with his fellow Quaker Committee members.

In 1807 the British Parliament voted to abolish the slave trade and enforce this through its maritime power. The following year, Freetown in West Africa, established in 1788, when the Timni chief Nembana sold a   strip of land for the use of a free community of ex-slaves from   America, was given greater British protection under a separate Act.

Abolition itself followed slowly, as agreements were concluded by the   Colonial Office and the various semi-autonomous colonial governments.   After further British parliamentary legislation, slaves in all of   Britain's colonies emancipated in 1838; although even then, many of the   'replacement' indentured labor schemes had to be challenged then   reformed substantially or abolished over time through renewed   anti-slavery campaigning, since colonial schemes could be used to thwart   emancipation in all but name.

Moreover, slavery continued on a large scale in the United States of America, which had become independent of Britain in 1783, until the South was defeated in the American Civil War in 1865.

In 1827 the Sheffield Female Society was the first to call for immediate   emancipation. In 1830 the Female society for Birmingham urged the Anti-Slavery Society to support immediate abolition instead of gradual abolition. In 1830   the Anti-Slavery Society finally agreed to support immediate abolition.   In Britain the Slavery Abolition Act was passed in 1833.