Preface Acknowledgements Prologue: The Beginning of a Great Matter List of Illustrations List of Maps PART ONE: THE TRADE 1 Three Centuries of Translatlantic Slaving 2 The Realities of the Trade 3 The Slave Coasts and Seas PART TWO: THE SUPPRESSION CAMPAIGN 4 Confused First Steps 1807-1811 5 The Tip of the Iceberg 1811-15 6 A Legal Minefield 7 Most Evident Falsehoods, 1820-4 8 A Lonely Furrow - Eastern Seas, 1824-8 9 Tenders and Tablecloths - Eastern Seas, 1828-31 10 Gallant Pin-pricks - Western Seas, 1824-31 11 To the Cape Station - Eastern Seas, 1831-5 12 Uncertain Sound - Western Seas, 1831-5 13 The Spanish Equipment Clause - Eastern Seas, 1835-8 14 Obduracy and Obfuscation - Western Seas, 1835-8 15 High-handed Action - Eastern Seas, 1838-9 16 Forbearance Exhausted - Western Seas, 1838-9 PART THREE: CONCLUSION Summary: Taking Stock Epilogue: Until it be Thoroughly Finished Appendices Glossary Endnotes Bibliography Index
Much is known about Britain's role in the Atlantic slave trade during the eighteenth century but few are aware of the sustained campaign against slaving conducted by the Royal Navy after the passing of the Slave Trade Abolition Act of 1807.
Peter Grindal enjoyed a successful career with the Royal Navy before retiring in 1992. He held positions at the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth and the Royal Naval College Greenwih and during his early career took part in suppressing the 1962-3 Brunei rebellion in Borneo. His experience includes minesweepers, fast patrol boats, frigates, amphibious assault ships and guided-missile destroyers in the Atlantic, Middle East, Far East and home waters. He was Training Offcier to Sub-Lieutenant The Prince of Wales, commanded the Royal Navy Task Group protecting shipping in the Arabian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq war and was Assistant Director Naval Warfare on the Naval Staff. His final role was Commander of the United Kingdom and Netherlands Amphibious Task Group for NATO. He was awarded the CBE in 1982.
Comprehensively overhauls existing understanding of the Royal
Navy's campaign against the Atlantic slave trade.
*Andrew Lambert, Laughton Professor of Naval History, King's
College, London, UK*
This is going to be the go-to reference work for anyone seeking
information on the Royal Navy's anti-slaving patrols.
*Rafe Blaufarb, Professor of History, Florida State University,
USA*
Such is its quality that it cannot fail to add immeasurably to our
understanding of both the history of the 19th century Royal navy
and the wider history of the slave trade. Opposing the Slavers is a
fine example of meticulous academic research and writing, ... a
magnificent achievement which thoroughly illuminates a previously
misunderstood or even partially forgotten part of the history of
Great Britain and the Royal Navy. There is no doubt it should be on
the shelves of any serious student of naval history or the history
of the transatlantic slave trade...a genuine work of
scholarship.
*Military History Review*
A work of immense scholarship ... I have to read a lot of books,
rarely do I encounter books that have excellence running through
them quite like this ... Peter Grindal's book is a masterpiece.
*Naval Review*
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