Henry Beaufoy

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Henry Beaufoy (November 1750 – 17 May 1795)[1] was a British MP.

He was the son of a Quaker wine merchant and educated at the academies at Hoxton and Warrington before studying at Edinburgh University in the early 1770s. He was a founder of Hackney College.[citation needed]

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in February 1782.[2]

He was returned as Member of Parliament (MP) for Minehead (1783–1784) and Great Yarmouth from 1784 [3] until his death.[4] As a Dissenter, he was a staunch advocate of the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, which limited the civil rights of non-members of the Church of England. He voted for abolition of the slave trade on 18 April 1791, but on 25 April 1792 announced his conversion to gradual abolition, in the hope that ‘the conclusions of my understanding may ultimately correspond with the dictates of my heart’. He expressed his fear that ‘too precipitate a benevolence augmented, while it hoped to have diminished, the sum of human calamity’, claiming that a cessation of the trade must aggravate the plight of the existing slave population of the West Indies, and that if it spelt ruin for the planters, no other country would abolish the trade and thereby destroy its colonies. He chaired the committees' of the House which on 1 May 1792 reported in favour of gradual abolition. The 1792 Slave Trade Bill passed the House of Commons mangled and mutilated by the modifications and amendments of Pitt, it lay for years, in the House of Lords.[5][6] Biographer William Hague considers the unfinished abolition of the slave trade to be Pitt's greatest failure.[7]

He was Secretary to the Board of Control.[citation needed]

He was a witness in John Horne Tooke's trial for high treason in 1794.[8]

He was buried in St Mary's, Ealing. He had married Elizabeth Jenks in 1778.

References[]

  1. ^ Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs – Constituencies beginning with "G" (part 2)
  2. ^ "Library and Archive Catalogue". Royal Society. Retrieved 11 December 2010.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "No. 12537". The London Gazette. 24 April 1784. p. 1.
  4. ^ The American journal of science and arts, 60, 1835
  5. ^ "Parliamentary History". Corbett. 1817. p. 1293.
  6. ^ "Journal of the House of Lords". H.M. Stationery Office 1790. 1790. p. 391 to 738.
  7. ^ Hague 2005, p.589
  8. ^ History of Parliament - Henry Beaufoy

Sources[]

  • Hague, William (2005). William Pitt the Younger. HarperPerennial. ISBN 978-0-00-714720-5.

External links[]

Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by

John Fownes Luttrell
Member of Parliament for Minehead
1783–1784
With: John Fownes Luttrell
Succeeded by
Charles Phipps
John Fownes Luttrell
Preceded by
Richard Walpole
Charles Townshend
Member of Parliament for Great Yarmouth
1784–1795
With: Sir John Jervis to 1790
Charles Townshend from 1790
Succeeded by

Charles Townshend
Retrieved from ""