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James
Ramsay
1733-1796
James
Ramsay was born at Fraserburgh in Scotland in 1733. He was educated
at King's College, Aberdeen between 1750 and 1755. After two
years as a doctor's assistant in London he entered the navy
in 1757 as a surgeon aboard the Arundul whose captain, Sir Charles
Middleton, was to offer Ramsay material aid in later life. While
serving at sea an injury disqualified him from further service.
He took holy orders in the Anglican church and settled into
a living on the Caribbean island of St Christopher (now usually
known as St Kitts). Along with his pastoral duties Ramsay practised
medicine, but the cash value of his living was derived from
the sugar plantations - worked by slaves - which were attached
to the church. Ramsay immediately welcomed all of his parishioners,
black and white, into his church and set out to convert the
slaves to Christianity. Moreover, he strongly criticised the
planters for their cruel treatment of the slaves and initiated
many measures intended to ameliorate the condition of the slaves.
The planters resented Ramsay's interference, as they saw it,
in the running of their lawful businesses and he soon came under
attack. Letters were written to local newspapers, an angry notice
was pinned to the church door, and his church was boycotted.
Exhausted by the conflict Ramsay quitted St. Christopher in
1777. He briefly accepted a naval chaplaincy before returning
in 1779 in the hope that the animosity against him might have
subsided. It had not and so he returned to Britain in 1781,
taking with him his personal servant, a black slave called Nestor.
He was presented to the valuable living of Teston and Nettlestead
in Kent which was in the gift of his former captain Sir Charles
Middleton. The following three years were spent writing the
Essay on the Treatment and Conversion of African Slaves in the
British Sugar Colonies which was published in the summer of
1784. This event immediately embroiled Ramsay in pamphlet debate
with various agents and supporters of the West-India Interest.
The debate brought him a measure of fame and influence - he
was invited to dine with the Prime Minister on several occasions
- but it had a more lasting effect in that it set the tone for
the slavery debate. Ramsay contributed a further half-dozen
publications to the campaign, many of them addressed directly
to pro-slavery apologists such as James Tobin and Raymund Harris.
Despite Ramsay's importance to the movement he did not live
to see its fruition. He died in 1789.ttp://pages.britishlibrary.net/brycchan.carey/abolition/ramsay.htm
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