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Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville

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First Lord of the Admiralty
In office
May 1804 – May 1805
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterWilliam Pitt the Younger
Preceded byThe Earl of St. Vincent
Succeeded byThe Lord Barham
Secretary of State for War
In office
July 1794 – March 1801
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterWilliam Pitt
Preceded byNew Office
Succeeded byLord Hobart
President of the Board of Control
In office
June 1793 – May 1801
MonarchGeorge III
Prime Minister
Preceded byThe Lord Grenville
Succeeded byViscount Lewisham
Home Secretary
In office
8 June 1791 – 11 July 1794
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterPitt
Preceded byThe Lord Grenville
Succeeded byThe Duke of Portland
Lord Advocate
In office
24 May 1775[1] – August 1783
MonarchGeorge III
Prime Minister
Preceded bySir James Montgomery
Succeeded byHenry Erskine
Member of Parliament
for Edinburgh
In office
1790–1802
Preceded bySir Adam Fergusson
Succeeded byCharles Hope
Personal details
Born(1742-04-28)28 April 1742
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died28 May 1811(1811-05-28) (aged 69)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Nationality
Political partyIndependent Whig
Spouses
  • (m. 1765; div. 1778)
  • Lady Jane Hope
    (m. 1793)
ChildrenRobert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
Melville Castle, home of Henry Dundas

Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, PC, FRSE (28 April 1742 – 28 May 1811), styled as Lord Melville from 1802, was the trusted lieutenant of British Prime Minister William Pitt and the most powerful politician in Scotland in the late 18th century.

Dundas was instrumental in the encouragement of the Scottish Enlightenment,[2] in the prosecution of the war against France, and in the expansion of British influence in India. Prime Minister Pitt appointed him Lord of Trade (1784–1786), Home Secretary (1791–1794), President of the Board of Control for Indian Affairs (1793–1801), Secretary at War (1794–1801) and First Lord of the Admiralty (1804–1805). His deft and almost total control of Scottish politics during a long period in which no monarch visited the country led to him being nicknamed "King Harry the Ninth", the "Grand Manager of Scotland" (a play on the masonic office of Grand Master of Scotland) and "The Uncrowned King of Scotland".[3] He was, however, a controversial figure, as he proposed a gradual abolition of the British transatlantic slave trade over eight years at a time when the leaders of the abolitionist movement sought an immediate end to the slave trade and the West Indian interests opposed any abolition at all.

Background and education

Dundas was born in Edinburgh on 28 April 1742 in the house known as 'Bishop's Land' (a former lodging of the Archbishop of St Andrews) on the Royal Mile. He was the fourth son of Robert Dundas of Arniston, Lord President of the Court of Session, by his second wife, Anne Gordon, daughter of Sir William Gordon of Invergordon. He first attended Dalkeith Grammar School before an attack of smallpox interrupted his studies, after which he moved to the Royal High School, Edinburgh, before enrolling at the University of Edinburgh to study law.

While a student, he was a member of the Edinburgh University Belles Lettres Society, participating in its meetings and gaining his first experience of public speaking at the society's debates.[4]

Dundas set up his legal offices at the head of Fleshmarket Close on the Royal Mile.[5]

Becoming a member of the Faculty of Advocates in 1763, he soon acquired a leading position in the Scottish legal system. He became Solicitor General for Scotland in 1766; but after his appointment as Lord Advocate in 1775, he gradually relinquished his legal practice to devote his attention more exclusively to public affairs.

In 1776, Dundas acted as counsel to Joseph Knight, who had been purchased as a slave in Jamaica and was later taken to Scotland. As a young man Knight tried to escape from his owner, and when that failed he launched a legal battle for his freedom. The case went to Scotland's highest civil court, where Dundas led Knight's legal team, in the case of Knight v. Wedderburn.[6] Dundas was assisted by prominent members of the Scottish Enlightenment, and also the writer Samuel Johnson, whose biographer James Boswell later wrote: "I cannot too highly praise the speech which Mr. Henry Dundas generously contributed to the cause of the sooty stranger."[7][8] Arguing that "as Christianity gained ground in different nations, slavery was abolished", and appealing to the earlier ruling in Somerset v Stewart in England, Dundas said "he hoped for the honour of Scotland, that the supreme Court of this country would not be the only court that would give its sanction to so barbarous a claim."[9] Dundas concluded his remarks by stating: "Human nature, my Lords, spurns at the thought of slavery among any part of our species." His pleading in Scotland's highest court was successful, and the Court ruled: "the dominion assumed over this Negro, under the law of Jamaica, being unjust, could not be supported in this country to any extent". In winning the case for Knight's emancipation, Dundas achieved a landmark decision in which the Court declared that no person could be a slave on Scottish soil. Any slaves then domiciled in Scotland could thus claim their freedom.[10] Michael Fry said that Dundas' success in Knight v Wedderburn was "instrumental in prohibiting not only negro slavery but also native serfdom in Scotland."[11]

Until 1785, he served also as Dean of the Faculty of Advocates.[12] He was created a Legum Doctor by the University of Edinburgh on 11 November 1789,[citation needed] was Lord Rector of the University of Glasgow from 1781 to 1783,[citation needed] and on 2 February 1788 was appointed Chancellor of the University of St Andrews.[citation needed] He was also a trustee for the University of Edinburgh and South Bridge.[citation needed]

Political career

Election to Parliament: the early years

In 1774, Dundas was returned to Parliament for Midlothian, and joined the party of Frederick North, Lord North; he was a proud Scots speaker and he soon distinguished himself by his clear and argumentative speeches. He was appointed Lord Advocate in 1775. His name appears in the 1776 minute book of the Poker Club. In 1778, Dundas made an attempt at proposing a Bill to relieve Scottish Catholics of their legal disabilities, but in response to severe riots in Edinburgh and Glasgow abandoned the project. After holding subordinate offices under William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne and Pitt, he entered the cabinet in 1791 as Secretary of State for the Home Department.

Cessation of the slave trade

Medallion of Henry Dundas, National Museum of Scotland

On 2 April 1792, abolitionist William Wilberforce sponsored a motion in the House of Commons "that the trade carried on by British subjects, for the purpose of obtaining slaves on the coast of Africa, ought to be abolished." He had introduced a similar motion in 1791, which was soundly defeated by MPs, with a vote of 163 opposed, 88 in favour.[13] Dundas was not present for that vote, but when it was again before MPs in 1792, Dundas tabled a petition from Edinburgh residents who supported abolition.[14] He then went on to affirm his agreement in principle with Wilberforce's motion: "My opinion has been always against the Slave Trade." He argued, however, that a vote for immediate abolition would be ineffective, as it would drive the slave trade underground. He anticipated, in particular, that merchants from other countries would step in to fill the gap left by the British. He stated: "this trade must be ultimately abolished, but by moderate measures".[15] He suggested that slavery and the slave trade should be abolished together, and proposed an end to hereditary slavery, which would have enabled the children born to present-day slaves to become free persons upon reaching adulthood.[14] He then introduced an amendment that would add the word "gradual" to the Wilberforce motion. The amendment was adopted, 192 in favour, 125 opposed. The motion as amended then passed 230 in favour, 85 opposed.[16] For the first time, the House of Commons voted to end the slave trade.

Three weeks after the vote, Dundas tabled resolutions setting out a plan to implement gradual abolition by the end of 1799. At that time he told the House that proceeding too quickly would cause West Indian merchants and landowners to continue the trade "in a different mode and other channels".[17] He argued that "if the committee would give the time proposed, they might abolish the trade; but, on the contrary, if this opinion was not followed, their children yet unborn would not see the end of the traffic."[18] MPs voted in favour of ending the trade in slaves by the end of 1796, after defeating proposals to end the trade in slaves in 1795 or 1794.[19][20] The House then amended the supporting resolutions tabled by Dundas, to reflect the new target date of 1796.[21] The motion and resolutions later failed to win the necessary support of the House of Lords, which deferred consideration until after it heard evidence and then dropped the issue altogether.

Alternative measures were proposed later in the 1790s. Dundas spoke against specific proposals tabled in 1796, while reiterating his support for abolition in principle and then abstaining from the vote. The loss of momentum was connected to the renewal of war with revolutionary France.[22]

It was not until 1807 that the House of Lords voted in favour of abolishing the trade in slaves. Historian Stephen Farrell has noted that by that time, the political climate had changed, and the economic advantages of abolition had become apparent.[23] The Slave Trade Act 1807 prohibited the trade in slaves in the British Empire. Ownership of slaves, however, remained legal in most of the British Empire until passage of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833.

Between 1792 and 1807, when the slave trade was eventually abolished, another half a million Africans were transported into slavery in the British colonies. Dundas insisted that any abolition of the slave trade could not succeed without the support of West Indian colonial legislatures. Abolitionists argued that West Indian assemblies would never support such measures, and that by making the abolition of the slave trade dependent on colonial reforms, Dundas was in effect indefinitely delaying it.[24] There is evidence, however, that Dundas had secured agreement of the West Indians before proposing the eight-year timeline.[25]

A few years after passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807, Wilberforce and Dundas encountered each other. Wilberforce recorded the event as follows: "We did not meet for a long time and all his connexions most violently abused me. About a year before he died ... we saw one another, and at first I thought he was passing on, but he stopped and called out, 'Ah Wilberforce, how do you do?' And gave me a hearty shake by the hand. I would have given a thousand pounds for that shake. I never saw him afterwards."[26][27]

Academic dispute over Dundas' impact on abolition

Modern historians are divided over whether Dundas should be held responsible for prolonging the slave trade. Historians of the slave trade and the abolitionist movement, including David Brion Davis, Roger Anstey, Robin Blackburn, and Stephen Tomkins have commented that Dundas' actions delayed rather than facilitated abolition.[28][29][30][31][32] According to Davis, "By making the abolition of the slave trade dependent on colonial reforms, Dundas suggested possibilities for indefinite delay."[28] Stephen Mullen, a research associate at Glasgow University and historian of slavery and the Atlantic slave trade, has called Dundas "a great delayer" of abolition.[33]

Other historians of British history have argued that delay was inevitable. Angela McCarthy notes that the revolutionary wars with France, and opposition in the House of Lords and in the royal family, presented enormous obstacles.[34] Sir Tom Devine, whose publications include editing Recovering Scotland's Slavery Past: The Caribbean Connection (Edinburgh University Press, 2015), has said that blaming Dundas for delay in the abolition of the slave trade is "bad history" and ignores the wider political and economic factors that were the true causes of delay.[35] Brian Young notes that in 1792, the motion for immediate cessation of the slave trade was heading for certain defeat. By inserting the word "gradual" into the motion, Young says Dundas ensured a successful vote for the ultimate abolition of the trade in slaves.[36]

Key positions in government

From June 1793, Dundas was appointed President of the Board of Control, generally responsible for overseeing the conduct of the East India Company and British affairs in India, a post he would hold until 1801. As the effective Minister for War as part of his Home Department responsibilities at the outbreak of the Wars of the French Revolution, he was Pitt's closest advisor and planner for Britain's military participation in the First Coalition. Although Dundas was replaced as Home Secretary by the Duke of Portland in July 1794, Pitt nonetheless wished to maintain direction of the war effort in Dundas' trusted hands, and so created for him the new office of Secretary of State for War. In this role, Dundas was responsible for organising several British expeditions to the Caribbean to seize vulnerable French and Spanish possessions, the largest being that led by Sir Ralph Abercromy in 1795–6. Dundas spearheaded a vain attempt by the British to capture Saint-Domingue from the French during the Haitian Revolution. After they lost territory to the armies of Toussaint L'Ouverture, and became bogged down in their retreat to the western towns of Mole St Nicholas and Jérémie in Saint-Domingue, the British accepted they could not defeat the armies of black ex-slaves, and negotiated to withdraw from the island, resulting in thousands of British deaths for no gain.[37][38]

Dundas also presided over a crisis in Britain's most important possession, the Colony of Jamaica. General George Walpole secured the surrender of the Jamaican Maroons of Cudjoe's Town (Trelawny Town), on condition they would not be transported off the island. The governor of Jamaica, Alexander Lindsay, 6th Earl of Balcarres, used a contrived breach of treaty as a pretext to deport most of the Trelawny Town Maroons to Nova Scotia. Walpole was disgusted with the governor's actions, pointing out that he had given the Maroons his word that they would not be transported off the island. Walpole resigned his commission, and went back to England, where he became an MP and protested in vain in the House of Commons how Balcarres had behaved in a duplicitous and dishonest way with the Maroons. Dundas sided with Balcarres in the dispute, and turned down Walpole's requests to get the Maroons returned to Jamaica.[39]

Dundas was a vigorous advocate of a strong British presence in the Mediterranean. He promptly met the challenge of Napoleon's attack on Egypt with actions which were vigorous and pivotal. While he did not prevent the French landing, he did play a key role in defeating it, thus enhancing British security in India.[40]

From about 1798 on he pleaded frequently to be allowed to resign from his offices on health grounds, but Pitt, who relied on him greatly, refused even to consider it.[41] Pitt's ministry left office in 1801. In 1802, Dundas was elevated to the Peerage of the United Kingdom as Viscount Melville and Baron Dunira, of Dunira in Perthshire. When Pitt returned to power in 1804, Dundas again entered office as First Lord of the Admiralty. Suspicion had arisen, however, as to the financial management of the Admiralty, of which Dundas had been treasurer between 1782 and 1800.

Commission of Inquiry

In 1802 the Commissioners of Naval Inquiry commenced inquiries into misappropriation of public funds while Dundas was treasurer of the Navy. Its report was presented in 1805. The Navy's paymaster, Alexander Trotter, admitted to the Commissioners that he had transferred public money from the Bank of England to his own credit in a private account at Coutts Bank, investing and loaning the funds at interest, from which he benefited.[42] Although his transactions caused no loss of public money,[42] but rather the loss of interest on that money, impeachment proceedings were taken against Dundas in 1806, given that the misappropriation had occurred during his term as Treasurer of the Navy. The trial, in the House of Lords, attracted considerable notice because of "dislike of patronage and the Pittite 'system', anti‐Scottish bias, and advocacy of financial and parliamentary reform".[43] The process ended in Dundas' acquittal.

Dundas had already left the Privy Council in 1805 but he remained in the House of Lords. He was readmitted to the Privy Council in 1807.[44] He declined an offer of an earldom in 1809.[45]

Family

Elizabeth Rannie or Rennie, first wife of Henry Dundas
Henry Dundas, First Viscount Melville
The simple stone to Henry Dundas, in the family vault. Old Lasswade Kirkyard
The Dundas Vault in old Lasswade Kirkyard, containing the first five Viscounts Melville

Lord Melville's first marriage was to Elizabeth Rannie, daughter of David Rannie, of Melville Castle, in 1765. She is believed to have been about 16 at the time of the marriage, although the date of her birth is not certain. She committed adultery (then known as "criminal conversation") with a Captain Everard Faukener in 1778, after 13 years of marriage, and abandoned Dundas and their four children, fleeing to an undisclosed location. Within days she confessed in a letter to Dundas, saying she was "undeserving of being your wife or the mother to your unhappy children."[46] Approximately a month later they were divorced. She went on to marry Faukener and never saw her children again. Henry Dundas became the owner of the family patrimony she brought to the marriage, in accordance with the law of the time, and he and their four children remained at Melville Castle after the marriage ended. Dundas paid Elizabeth a monthly annuity until his death, which was not required by law. Their eldest son Robert inherited the estate in 1811. Robert, the 2nd Viscount Melville, continued the annuity until Elizabeth's death at the age of 98.[46]

Between 1785 and 1806 he leased a large country house called Warren House on the edge of Wimbledon Common where he entertained George III and Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger. After his divorce Dundas was married again, to Lady Jane Hope, daughter of John Hope, 2nd Earl of Hopetoun, in 1793. He died in May 1811, in Edinburgh, aged 69, and was succeeded in his titles by his son from his first marriage, Robert. The Viscountess Melville later married Thomas Wallace, 1st Baron Wallace and died in June 1829.[47]

Dundas is buried in a vault in Old Lasswade Kirkyard, with most of his descendants.

Legacy and memory

Melville Monument in St Andrew Square, Edinburgh.

Late in life Dundas's health suffered and he was financially distressed. He attended debates in the House of Lords and maintained his position as a member of Privy Council, but kept a lower public profile. However at his death the immediate reaction was one of widespread praise from most quarters (apart from the Whigs in Scotland). By 1900, however, historians were harsh, denouncing him as the epitome of corruption and oppression who had sold out Scotland to the English. By the late 20th century his reputation had been restored. He was praised for his military policies, for giving Scotland a cohesive government, and for making it a major player in imperial affairs.[48]

Dundas was a friend of John Graves Simcoe, Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, who named the town of Dundas in southern Ontario after him.[49] Owing to the town's short-lived prominence in Upper Canada, streets and historical highways leading to Dundas were named Dundas Street; these include portions of Highway 5, Highway 2 and Highway 8. In the city of Toronto, Yonge–Dundas Square is a prominent landmark and commercial centre, while Dundas Street is a main thoroughfare of the city.

In 1792 Dundas County, Ontario was named in his honour.

Dundas Island was named by Captain George Vancouver in Dundas's honour. Vancouver originally believed it to be one island, Dundas's Island, but it was later determined that it was in fact a small archipelago. The group became known as the Dundas Islands, while constituent islands were given the names Melville Island, Baron Island, and Dunira Island, in respect of Dundas's titles.[50]

The District of Dundas in New South Wales was named after the Colonial Secretary, Henry Dundas. The District of Dundas was abolished in 1889 although the name still survives in the Sydney suburb of Dundas.[51]

In 1848, John Septimus Roe, the government surveyor (in the then colony of Western Australia), was searching for pastoral land and discovered the area around Norseman which he named Dundas Hills, after the colonial secretary. Gold was discovered there in 1893, the Dundas Field was proclaimed, and the town of Dundas established (ca. 40 km south of Norseman, later abandoned), which eventually led to the present Shire of Dundas.[52]

A monument to Dundas, modeled loosely on Trajan's Column in Rome, stands in the centre of St Andrew Square, Edinburgh. The cost of the Melville Monument was "met by contributions from officers and men of the Royal Navy."[53] It was designed in 1821 by William Burn, who was advised by Robert Stevenson after residents of the square expressed concern about the adequacy of the foundations to support a column of such height. It cost £8,000.[54] The garden surrounding the Melville Monument was opened to the public in 2008.[53] A statue of Dundas, sculpted by Robert Forrest from a model by Francis Chantrey,[55] was added to the top in 1828. The long-time headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland, directly to the east, is Dundas House; construction was completed in 1774 for Sir Lawrence Dundas, a relative.[56][57] In July 2020 temporary signs were erected by the City of Edinburgh Council to note that the plaque would be updated to note Dundas' role in delaying the abolition of slavery.[58]

A statue (1818), by Sir Francis Chantrey, of Dundas stands against the north wall inside Parliament Hall in Edinburgh. Furthermore, the Melville Monument, an obelisk erected in 1812 on Dunmore hill, overlooking the scenic village of Comrie in Perthshire, commemorates his life.[59]

Dundas Street, Hong Kong, was also named for him.

Dundas Marsh Crown Game Preserve was created in 1927 in Cootes Paradise within what is now in Royal Botanical Gardens (Ontario).

Controversy over legacy

Given accusations that he contributed to delay in the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade during the 1790s, activists have argued against the memorialisation of Dundas.[60][61]

Over 14,000 people signed an online petition in June 2020 to rename Dundas Street, a major street in downtown Toronto.[62] The petition arose from a Black Lives Matter protest on 5 June 2020, where Dundas Street was the site of the march.[63] The protest was documented by Mark Terry in the film Scotland, Slavery, and Statues.[64] In July 2021, Toronto City Council voted to rename the street and other civic assets, with a new name to be chosen by April 2022.[65] Mayor John Tory supported the renaming, stating that the man "never stepped foot in Canada".[65]

In Edinburgh, demonstrators graffitied the Melville Monument in June 2020.[66][67] In March 2021, the City of Edinburgh Council approved a permanent plaque dedicated to the memory of enslaved Africans.[68] Professor Sir Tom Devine and descendants of Dundas criticised the content of the plaque as historically inaccurate.[69][70]

Fictional references

Lord Melville, as First Lord of the Admiralty, is present or a background character in several of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey–Maturin novels. As a major official favourably disposed to Jack Aubrey, Lord Melville's political interest is often helpful to the captain. O'Brian casts Melville's impeachment for malversation of public monies as a political attack using naval intelligence spending, the details of which cannot be disclosed for security and the safety of intelligence agents—such as Stephen Maturin. Additionally, Heneage 'Hen' Dundas, a real-life naval officer son of Thomas Dundas, appears as a younger son of Lord Melville. As a former crewmate and close friend of one of the eponymous main characters, Jack Aubrey, Heneage Dundas is one of the recurring characters of the series.

He is also a supporting character in the legal drama Garrow's Law. As a leading figure of the establishment, he is a bitter enemy of the radical hero, William Garrow. He is played by Stephen Boxer. Also, fictional references were made to Sir Henry Dundas in Chapter 24 of L.A. Meyer's third book in the Jacky Faber series, which was titled "Under the Jolly Roger" as well as the former Lord Dundas in Meyer's sixth book, which was titled, "My Bonny Light Horseman". He was portrayed as 'bookish', although a sweet and sincere man otherwise. A reference was made to Henry Dundas and his role in the abolition of the Slave Trade in the motion picture Amazing Grace (2006) where he was played by Bill Paterson.[71]

Dundas is also featured in Joseph Knight, by James Robertson (Fourth Estate, 2003) – a fictional account of the true story of the former slave for whom Dundas successfully appealed to two levels of Scottish courts, ultimately winning a declaration of Knight's emancipation, and the emancipation of all purported slaves on Scottish soil.

Arms

Coat of arms of Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville
Crest
A lion's head affronteé Gules struggling through an oak bush all Proper.
Escutcheon
Argent a lion rampant Gules within a bordure Azure charged with three boars' heads couped Or two in chief and one in base.
Supporters
Dexter a leopard reguardant, sinister a stag, both Proper.[72]
Motto
Essayez (top); Quod Potui Perfecti (I have done what I could do.) (bottom)

References

  1. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, Volumes 1–20, 22
  2. ^ Fry, Michael (1992). The Dundas Despotism. Edinburgh Univ Pr. pp. 62–65, 141. ISBN 978-0748603527.
  3. ^ "Henry Dundas' private papers bought for Scots archive". Glasgow: BBC News Scotland. 3 July 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  4. ^ Bator, Paul (1996). "The University of Edinburgh Belles Lettres Society (1759-64) and the Rhetoric of the Novel". Rhetoric Review. 14 (2): 280–298. doi:10.1080/07350199609389066. ISSN 0735-0198. JSTOR 465857.
  5. ^ Grant's Old and New Edinburgh vol.2 p.236
  6. ^ "Knight v Wedderburn Upheld". African American Registry. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  7. ^ Lovat-Fraser, J.A. (1916). Henry Dundas, Viscount Melville. Cambridge.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Boswell, James (24 November 2015) [1851]. The Life of Samuel Johnson: Volume III, 1776-1780. ISBN 9783734091261. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  9. ^ Caledonian Mercury, 21 February 1776.
  10. ^ Monteith, Brian (15 June 2020). "Obliterating our history by removing statues is path to repeating mistakes". The Scotsman.
  11. ^ Michael Fry, The Dundas Despotism, (Edinburgh University Press, 1992), at 200
  12. ^ Henry Dundas Viscount Melville. p. 63.
  13. ^ Cobbett, William, ed. (1817). "The Parliamentary History of England, From the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Vol XXIX, (First Session of the Seventeenth Parliament; Second Session of the Seventeenth Parliament, 1791-1792)". Bodleian Libraries. pp. 359, 249–359. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  14. ^ a b The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-trade, in the House of Commons, on Monday the Second of April, 1792. House of Commons. 1792. p. 97.
  15. ^ The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-trade, in the House of Commons, on Monday the Second of April, 1792. House of Commons. 1792. pp. 94–102.
  16. ^ The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-trade, in the House of Commons, Monday the Second of April, 1792. House of Commons. 1792. p. 169.
  17. ^ Cobbett's Parliamentary History. Vol. 29: Comprising the period from the twenty-second of March 1791, to the thirteenth of December 1792. p. 1203 – via Bodleian Libraries.
  18. ^ Cobbett's Parliamentary History. Vol. 29. p. 1268 – via Bodleian Libraries.
  19. ^ Cobbett's Parliamentary History. Vol. 29. p. 1293 – via Bodleian Libraries.
  20. ^ By way of contrast, see Pennsylvania's 1780 abolition legislation, An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery.
  21. ^ Cobbett's Parliamentary History. p. 1293 – via Bodleian Libraries.
  22. ^ Popkin, Jeremy D. (2010). You are all free: the Haitian revolution and the abolition of slavery. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-51722-5. OCLC 637038955.
  23. ^ Farrell, Stephen (2007). "'Contrary to the Principles of Justice, Humanity and Sound Policy': The Slave Trade, Parliamentary Politics and the Abolition Act, 1807". Parliamentary History. 26 (4): 141–202. doi:10.1111/j.1750-0206.2007.tb00685.x. S2CID 146473144. Retrieved 2 July 2020 – via Project MUSE.
  24. ^ David Brion Davis (1999). The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution, 1770–1823. Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-988083-6. Retrieved 29 October 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  25. ^ McCarthy, Angela (29 July 2022). "Historians, Activists and Britain's Slave Trade Abolition Debate: The Henry Dundas Plaque Debacle". Scottish Affairs. 31 (3): 325–344. doi:10.3366/scot.2022.0420. S2CID 251189142.
  26. ^ Wilberforce, Robert Isaac (1843). The Life of Wilberforce. London: Seeley, Burnside and Seeley. pp. 327–328.
  27. ^ Furber, Holden (1931). "Henry Dundas: first viscount Melville, 1741–1811, political manager of Scotland, statesman, administrator of British India". London: Oxford University Press, H. Milford. p. 302. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  28. ^ a b Davis, David Brion (15 April 1999). The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution, 1770–1823. Oxford University Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-19-988083-6.
  29. ^ Blackburn, Robin (1988). The overthrow of colonial slavery, 1776–1848. London: Verso. ISBN 0-86091-188-8. OCLC 17384058.
  30. ^ Anstey, Roger (1975). The Atlantic slave trade and British abolition, 1760-1810. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-14846-0. OCLC 1404090.
  31. ^ Tomkins, Stephen (24 August 2012). The Clapham Sect: How Wilberforce's Circle Transformed Britain. Lion Books. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-7459-5739-5.
  32. ^ Kitson, Peter J.; Lee, Debbie; Mellor, Anne K.; Walvin, James (27 April 2020). Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation. Vol. 2. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-74862-8.
  33. ^ Mullin, Stephen (2021). "Henry Dundas: A 'Great Delayer' of the Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade". Scottish Historical Review. 100 (2): 218–248. doi:10.3366/shr.2021.0516. S2CID 240562064.
  34. ^ Angela, McCarthy (May 2022). "Bad History: The Controversy over Henry Dundas and the Historiography of the Abolition of the Slave Trade". Scottish Affairs. 31 (2).
  35. ^ Horne, Marc (26 October 2020). "Rewording of Henry Dundas plaque bad history, says Sir Tom Devine". The Times.
  36. ^ "Henry Dundas descendant defends ancestor's record". BBC News. 14 June 2020. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  37. ^ Geggus, David (1982). Slavery, War and Revolution: The British Occupation of Saint Domingue, 1793–1798. New York: Clarendon Press.
  38. ^ James, C. L. R. (1938). Black Jacobins. London: Penguin. pp. 109, 163–182.
  39. ^ Campbell, Maroons of Jamaica, pp. 209–249.
  40. ^ Jones, Edward B. (1973). "Henry Dundas, India, and British Reactions to Napoleon's Invasion of Egypt, 1798–1801". Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association: 41–57.
  41. ^ Hague, William (2004). William Pitt the Younger. Harper Collins.
  42. ^ a b Coleridge, Ernest Hartley (1920). The life of Thomas Coutts, Banker. London: John Lane. p. 213.
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Further reading

  • Brown, David. "The Government of Scotland under Henry Dundas and William Pitt." History 83.270 (1998): 265–279.
  • Dwyer, John, and Alexander Murdoch. "Paradigms and Politics: Manners, Morals and the Rise of Henry Dundas, 1770-1784," in John Dwyer, Roger A. Mason, and Alexander Murdoch (eds.), New Perspectives on the Politics and Culture of Early modern Scotland (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1982), pp. 210–248.
  • Ehrman, John. The Younger Pitt: The Years of Acclaim (1969); The Reluctant Transition (1983); The Consuming Struggle (1996). Monumental scholarly study with extensive coverage of Dundas.
  • Fry, Michael. "Dundas, Henry, first Viscount Melville (1742–1811)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8250
  • Fry, Michael. The Dundas despotism (1992) on Scotland
  • Furber, Holden. Henry Dundas: First Viscount Melville, 1741–1811, Political Manager of Scotland, Statesman, Administrator of British India (Oxford UP, 1931). Long scholarly biography online
  • Hutchison, Gary D. "'The Manager in Distress': Reaction to the Impeachment of Henry Dundas, 1805–7." Parliamentary History 36.2 (2017): 198–217. PDF
  • Ingram, Edward. Two Views of British India: Private Correspondence of Mr. Dundas and Lord Wellesley, 1798-1801 (Adams & Dart, 1970)
  • Lovat-Fraser, J.A. Henry Dundas, viscount Melville (1916) online
  • McCarthy, Angela. "Bad History: The Controversy over Henry Dundas and the Historiography of the Abolition of the Slave Trade." Scottish Affairs (2022): 1-26.
  • Matheson, Cyril. The Life of Henry Dundas, First Viscount Melville, 1742–1811 (1933).
  • Mullen, Stephen. "Henry Dundas: a 'great delayer’of the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade." Scottish Historical Review (2021). online
  • Murdoch, Alexander. "Henry Dundas, Scotland and the Union with Ireland, 1792–1801." in Scotland in the Age of the French Revolution (2005) pp: 125–39.
  • Taylor, Michael. The Interest: How the British Establishment Resisted the Abolition of Slavery (Penguin, 2020)
  • Wright, Esmond. "Henry Dudas--Harry the Ninth." History Today (March 1958) 8#3 pp 155–163
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