Why a West Africa Squadron Memorial should be built in Portsmouth

  • last year
Transcript
00:00 Hi, my name's Colin Kemp, I'm chairman of the West Africa Squadron Memorial Fund.
00:06 Behind me is Portsmouth Harbour, home of the Royal Navy.
00:11 And 150 years ago, Portsmouth was home to the West Africa Squadron.
00:16 Now you probably won't have heard of them, or know what they do.
00:19 Let me tell you.
00:21 In 1807, Britain was the first country to abolish slavery,
00:25 and we used the power of the Royal Navy to enforce that ban globally.
00:31 The West Africa Squadron, between 1807 and 1867,
00:35 freed 150,000 Africans who were destined for slavery in North America.
00:42 But it was at a cost.
00:44 The cost of 1,800 lives of British sailors.
00:48 Now there's no memorial to that, nor a memorial to the fact that Britain
00:52 was the first country to abolish slavery.
00:55 So with your help, I'd like to give the Bill Memorial to the West Africa Squadron
00:59 to commemorate both of those events.
01:02 Thanks very much.

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