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Clapham Sect

The Clapham Sect, or Clapham Saints, were a group of social reformers associated with Holy Trinity Clapham in the period from the 1780s to the 1840s. Despite the label "sect", most members remained in the established (and dominant) Church of England, which was highly interwoven with offices of state. However, its successors were in many cases outside of the established Anglican Church.[citation needed]

Blue plaque commemorating William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect

History edit

The Clapham movement grew from 18th-century evangelical trends in the Church of England (the Anglican Church) and started to coalesce around residents of Clapham, especially during the rectorship there of John Venn (in office: 1792-1813)[1] and came to engage in systematically advocating social reform.[2]

In the course of time the growth of evangelical Christian revivalism in England[3] and the movement for Catholic emancipation fed into a waning of the old precept that every Englishman automatically counted as an Anglican.[4] Some new Christian groups (such as the Methodists and the Plymouth Brethren) moved away from Anglicanism, and the Christian social reformers who succeeded the Claphamites from about the 1830s[5] often exemplified Nonconformist conscience[6] and identified with groups functioning outside the established Anglican Church.[7]

Summary and context edit

These were reformists and abolitionists, being contemporary terms as the 'Sect' was – until 1844 – unnamed. They figured and heard readings, sermons and lessons from prominent and wealthy Evangelical Anglicans who called for the liberation of slaves,[8] abolition of the slave trade and the reform of the penal system, and recognised and advocated other cornerstone civil-political rights and socio-economic rights. Defying the status quo of labour exploitation and consequent vested interests in the legislature was laborious and was motivated by their Christian faith and concern for social justice and fairness for all human beings. Their most famous member was William Wilberforce, widely commemorated in monuments and credited with hastening the end of the slave trade.

Electoral and other political rights were a main cause of all Radicals then their Northern successors the Chartists, their shared earliest success being the Great Reform Act 1832. Many of the other key rights saw a comparative context in treatises of the Age of Enlightenment, and Age of Revolutions. France's 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, together with the 1689 English Bill of Rights, the 1776 United States Declaration of Independence, and the 1789 United States Bill of Rights, inspired, in large part, the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[9]

Campaigns and successes edit

 
Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, in 1803

The name stems from most of its figures being non-dissenting parishioners of Clapham, then a village south of London (today part of south-west London), where Wilberforce and Thornton, its two most influential leaders, often lived and met. Liturgy, sermons and sometimes meetings at Holy Trinity Church on Clapham Common were a central feature, largely neighboured by upmarket new homes and expensive single-home plots of land (fashionable villas in the terms of the time).

Henry Venn, since seen as the founder, was lesser clergy, Curate, there (from at least 1754) and his son John became rector (parish priest) (1792–1813). The House of Commons politicians (MPs) William Wilberforce (first elected 1780) and Henry Thornton (first elected 1782), two of the most influential of the sect were parishioners and many of the meetings were held in their houses. They were encouraged by Beilby Porteus, the Bishop of London, himself an abolitionist and reformer, who sympathised with many of their aims. The term "Clapham Sect" is an almost non-contemporaneous invention by James Stephen in an article of 1844 which celebrated and romanticised the work of these reformers.[10]

The reformers were partly composed of members from St Edmund Hall, Oxford and Magdalene College, Cambridge, where the Vicar of Holy Trinity Church, Charles Simeon had preached to students from the university, some of whom underwent an evangelical conversion experience and later became associated with the Clapham Sect.

Lampooned in their day as "the saints", the group published a journal, the Christian Observer, edited by Zachary Macaulay and were also credited with the foundation of several missionary and tract societies, including the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Church Missionary Society.

After many decades of work both in British society and in Parliament, the reformers saw their efforts rewarded with the final passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807, banning the trade throughout the British Empire and, after many further years of campaigning, the total emancipation of British Dominion slaves with the passing of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833. They also campaigned vigorously for Britain to use its influence to work towards abolishing slavery throughout the world.

Some of the group, Granville Sharp, Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce, were responsible for the founding in 1787 of Sierra Leone as a settlement for some of the African-Americans freed by the British during the American Revolutionary War; it thus became the first non trading-post British "colony" akin to a fledgling mission state in Africa, whose purpose in Clarkson's words was "the abolition of the slave trade, the civilisation of Africa, and the introduction of the gospel there".[11]: 11  Later, in 1792, another of the group John Clarkson was instrumental in the creation of its capital Freetown.

The group are described by the historian Stephen Tomkins as "a network of friends and families in England, with William Wilberforce as its centre of gravity, who were powerfully bound together by their shared moral and spiritual values, by their religious mission and social activism, by their love for each other, and by marriage".[11]

By 1848 when evangelical bishop John Bird Sumner became Archbishop of Canterbury, it is said that between a quarter and a third of Anglican clergy were linked to the movement, which by then had diversified greatly in its goals, although they were no longer considered an organised faction.[12]

Members of the group founded or were involved with a number of other societies, including the Abolition Society, formally known as the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade (founded by Clarkson, Sharp and others)[13] and run largely by white middle-class women[14] of Quaker, Unitarian and Evangelical faiths[15] The Society for the Mitigation and Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions followed, in 1823, and there was also the Proclamation Society,[16][17] the Sunday School Society, the Bettering Society,[18] and the Small Debt Society.[16]

The Clapham Sect have been credited with playing a significant part in the development of Victorian morality, through their writings, their societies, their influence in Parliament, and their example in philanthropy and moral campaigns, especially against slavery. In the words of Tomkins, "The ethos of Clapham became the spirit of the age."[11]: 248 

Members edit

Members of the Clapham Sect, and those associated with them, included:[19]

See also edit

  Christianity portal

References edit

  1. ^ Venn, John (8 March 2012) [1904]. Annals of a Clerical Family: Being Some Account of the Family and Descendants of William Venn, Vicar of Otterton, Devon, 1600-1621. Cambridge Library Collection - Religion (reprint ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108044929. Retrieved 2 December 2022. [...] John [Venn] was the founder of an evangelical sect at Clapham (where his father had also been curate), and of the Church Missionary Society [...].
  2. ^ Nirmala Sharma (21 March 2016). Unraveling Misconceptions: A New Understanding of E. M. Forster's A Passage to India. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 9781514475218. Retrieved 2 December 2022. 'The Clapham Sect was a group of evangelical reformers that presented a new "crystallization of power: parliament, the Established Church, the journals of opinion, the universities, the City, the civil and fighting services, the government of the Empire. Clapham found a place in them all, not infrequently a distinguished one.' [...] The Clapham Sect was also noted for its 'advocacy of the abolition of the slave trade.'
  3. ^ Ditchfield, G. M. (2003) [1998]. The Evangelical Revival. Introductions to history (reprint ed.). London: Psychology Press. ISBN 9781857284812. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
  4. ^ Morgan, Edmund S. (28 June 2017) [2015]. Visible Saints: The History of a Puritan Idea. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 9781787204683. Retrieved 1 December 2022. Every Englishman had been automatically transformed by government decree into a member of the new Anglican church.
  5. ^ Twells, Alison (17 December 2008). The Civilising Mission and the English Middle Class, 1792-1850: The 'Heathen' at Home and Overseas (reprint ed.). Basingstoke: Springer. p. 38. ISBN 9780230234727. Retrieved 1 December 2022. The 'Claphamites' were a group of powerful and influential men associated with the Clapham congregation [...].
  6. ^ Bradley, Ian C. (1976). The Call to Seriousness: The Evangelical Impact on the Victorians. Cape. p. 16. ISBN 9780224011624. Retrieved 1 December 2022. [...] the [...] very important contribution made by Nonconformity to British life in the nneteenth century.
  7. ^ Carter, Grayson (2006). "Evangelical Religion". In Litzenberger, C. J.; Lyon, Eileen Groth (eds.). The Human Tradition in Modern Britain. Reference,Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 56–57. ISBN 9780742537354. Retrieved 25 November 2022. By the end of the long eighteenth century [1688-1832], the members of the Clapham Sect were quickly passing from the scene. [...] The successors of the Clapham Sect lived at a time of rapid and fundamental social change, arising primarily from the continued effects of industrialization. [...] various issues challenged in different ways the spiritual aspirations of the evangelical movement, producing considerable pressure (and even unrest) within its ranks. As a result, during the late 1820s and early 1830s, the 'Gospel movement' began to fragment into a number of diverse, but not altogether distinct, parties and even denominations. Examples of millennial and apocalyptic speculation, ultra-Calvinistic doctrines, and even extreme forms of Pentecostalism, could now be found among the adherents of evangelical religion, leading many traditional evangelicals to lose confidence in the ability of the 'Gospel movement' to bring about the spiritual renewal of the English church and the nation as a whole.
  8. ^ Ann M. Burton, "British Evangelicals, Economic Warfare and the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1794–1810." Anglican and Episcopal History 65#2 (1996): 197–225. in JSTOR
  9. ^ Douglas K. Stevenson (1987), American Life and Institutions, Stuttgart (Germany), p. 34
  10. ^ Gathro, John "William Wilberforce and His Circle of Friends", CS Lewis Institute. Retrieved 31 August 2016
  11. ^ a b c Tomkins, (2010) The Clapham Sect: How Wilberforce’s circle changed Britain,
  12. ^ Boyd Hilton, A Mad, Bad, Dangerous People? England 1783–1846 (2006), p 175.
  13. ^ "The role of the Clapham Sect in the fight for the abolition of slavery". Art UK. 10 August 2020. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  14. ^ "'Am I Not a Woman and a Sister?'". The National Archives. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  15. ^ "History – British History in depth: Women: From Abolition to the Vote". BBC. 23 January 2007. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  16. ^ a b Scotland, Nigel (29 January 2020). "The social work of the Clapham Sect: an assessment". The Gospel Coalition. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  17. ^ "History – William Wilberforce". BBC. 7 November 2006. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  18. ^ Gathro, Richard (2001). "William Wilberforce and His Circle of Friends". Knowing & Doing. C. S. Lewis Institute. ...originally appeared in the Summer 2001 issue of the C. S. Lewis Institute Report.
  19. ^ David Spring, "The Clapham Sect: Some Social and Political Aspects." Victorian Studies 5#1 (1961): 35–48.

Further reading edit

  • Brown, Ford K. Fathers of the Victorians: The Age of Wilberforce (1961).
  • Burton, Ann M. "British Evangelicals, Economic Warfare and the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1794–1810." Anglican and Episcopal History 65#2 (1996): 197–225. in JSTOR
  • Butler, Ryan J. "Transatlantic Discontinuity? The Clapham Sect's Influence in the United States." Church history 88, no. 3 (2019): 672–695.
  • Cowper, William. "'The Better Hour Is Near': Wilberforce And Transformative Religion." (Evangelical History Association Lecture 2013) online
  • Danker, Ryan Nicholas. Wesley and the Anglicans: Political Division in Early Evangelicalism (InterVarsity Press, 2016).
  • Hennell, Michael. John Venn and the Clapham Sect (1958).
  • Hilton, Boyd. The Age of Atonement: The Influence of Evangelicalism on Social and Economic Thought, 1795-‐1865 (1988).
  • Hilton, Boyd. A Mad, Bad, Dangerous People? England 1783–1846 (2006), pp 174–88, passim.
  • Himmelfarb, Gertrude. "From Clapham to Bloomsbury: A Genealogy of Morals." Commentary 79.2 (1985): 36.
  • Howse, Ernest Marshall. Saints in Politics: The 'Clapham Sect' and the Growth of Freedom (University of Toronto Press, 1952)
  • Klein, Milton M. Amazing Grace: John Thornton & the Clapham Sect (2004), 160 pp.
  • Major, Andrea (2012). Slavery, Abolitionism and Empire in India, 1772–1843. Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-84631-758-3.
  • Spring, David. "The Clapham Sect: Some Social and Political Aspects." Victorian Studies 5#1 (1961): 35–48. in JSTOR
  • Tomkins, Stephen. The Clapham Sect: How Wilberforce's Circle Changed Britain (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2010)
  • Tomkins, Stephen. William Wilberforce: A Biography (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2007).
  • Ward, William Reginald. The Protestant Evangelical Awakening (Cambridge University Press, 2002).
  • Wolffe, John/ "Clapham Sect (act. 1792–1815)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2005; online edn, Oct 2016 accessed 13 Nov 2017

External links edit

  • The Clapham Group – 1701–1800 – Church History Timeline
  • William Wilberforce (1759–1833): The Shrimp Who Stopped Slavery by Christopher D. Hancock
  • William Wilberforce 'condoned slavery', Colonial Office papers reveal – The Guardian – Davies, Caroline. Monday 2 August 2010.
  • Do-gooders in 1790s London – The Economist – Aug 26th 2010

clapham, sect, clapham, saints, were, group, social, reformers, associated, with, holy, trinity, clapham, period, from, 1780s, 1840s, despite, label, sect, most, members, remained, established, dominant, church, england, which, highly, interwoven, with, office. The Clapham Sect or Clapham Saints were a group of social reformers associated with Holy Trinity Clapham in the period from the 1780s to the 1840s Despite the label sect most members remained in the established and dominant Church of England which was highly interwoven with offices of state However its successors were in many cases outside of the established Anglican Church citation needed Blue plaque commemorating William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect Contents 1 History 2 Summary and context 3 Campaigns and successes 4 Members 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2022 The Clapham movement grew from 18th century evangelical trends in the Church of England the Anglican Church and started to coalesce around residents of Clapham especially during the rectorship there of John Venn in office 1792 1813 1 and came to engage in systematically advocating social reform 2 In the course of time the growth of evangelical Christian revivalism in England 3 and the movement for Catholic emancipation fed into a waning of the old precept that every Englishman automatically counted as an Anglican 4 Some new Christian groups such as the Methodists and the Plymouth Brethren moved away from Anglicanism and the Christian social reformers who succeeded the Claphamites from about the 1830s 5 often exemplified Nonconformist conscience 6 and identified with groups functioning outside the established Anglican Church 7 Summary and context editThese were reformists and abolitionists being contemporary terms as the Sect was until 1844 unnamed They figured and heard readings sermons and lessons from prominent and wealthy Evangelical Anglicans who called for the liberation of slaves 8 abolition of the slave trade and the reform of the penal system and recognised and advocated other cornerstone civil political rights and socio economic rights Defying the status quo of labour exploitation and consequent vested interests in the legislature was laborious and was motivated by their Christian faith and concern for social justice and fairness for all human beings Their most famous member was William Wilberforce widely commemorated in monuments and credited with hastening the end of the slave trade Electoral and other political rights were a main cause of all Radicals then their Northern successors the Chartists their shared earliest success being the Great Reform Act 1832 Many of the other key rights saw a comparative context in treatises of the Age of Enlightenment and Age of Revolutions France s 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen together with the 1689 English Bill of Rights the 1776 United States Declaration of Independence and the 1789 United States Bill of Rights inspired in large part the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights 9 Campaigns and successes edit nbsp Freetown the capital of Sierra Leone in 1803The name stems from most of its figures being non dissenting parishioners of Clapham then a village south of London today part of south west London where Wilberforce and Thornton its two most influential leaders often lived and met Liturgy sermons and sometimes meetings at Holy Trinity Church on Clapham Common were a central feature largely neighboured by upmarket new homes and expensive single home plots of land fashionable villas in the terms of the time Henry Venn since seen as the founder was lesser clergy Curate there from at least 1754 and his son John became rector parish priest 1792 1813 The House of Commons politicians MPs William Wilberforce first elected 1780 and Henry Thornton first elected 1782 two of the most influential of the sect were parishioners and many of the meetings were held in their houses They were encouraged by Beilby Porteus the Bishop of London himself an abolitionist and reformer who sympathised with many of their aims The term Clapham Sect is an almost non contemporaneous invention by James Stephen in an article of 1844 which celebrated and romanticised the work of these reformers 10 The reformers were partly composed of members from St Edmund Hall Oxford and Magdalene College Cambridge where the Vicar of Holy Trinity Church Charles Simeon had preached to students from the university some of whom underwent an evangelical conversion experience and later became associated with the Clapham Sect Lampooned in their day as the saints the group published a journal the Christian Observer edited by Zachary Macaulay and were also credited with the foundation of several missionary and tract societies including the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Church Missionary Society After many decades of work both in British society and in Parliament the reformers saw their efforts rewarded with the final passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807 banning the trade throughout the British Empire and after many further years of campaigning the total emancipation of British Dominion slaves with the passing of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 They also campaigned vigorously for Britain to use its influence to work towards abolishing slavery throughout the world Some of the group Granville Sharp Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce were responsible for the founding in 1787 of Sierra Leone as a settlement for some of the African Americans freed by the British during the American Revolutionary War it thus became the first non trading post British colony akin to a fledgling mission state in Africa whose purpose in Clarkson s words was the abolition of the slave trade the civilisation of Africa and the introduction of the gospel there 11 11 Later in 1792 another of the group John Clarkson was instrumental in the creation of its capital Freetown The group are described by the historian Stephen Tomkins as a network of friends and families in England with William Wilberforce as its centre of gravity who were powerfully bound together by their shared moral and spiritual values by their religious mission and social activism by their love for each other and by marriage 11 By 1848 when evangelical bishop John Bird Sumner became Archbishop of Canterbury it is said that between a quarter and a third of Anglican clergy were linked to the movement which by then had diversified greatly in its goals although they were no longer considered an organised faction 12 Members of the group founded or were involved with a number of other societies including the Abolition Society formally known as the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade founded by Clarkson Sharp and others 13 and run largely by white middle class women 14 of Quaker Unitarian and Evangelical faiths 15 The Society for the Mitigation and Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions followed in 1823 and there was also the Proclamation Society 16 17 the Sunday School Society the Bettering Society 18 and the Small Debt Society 16 The Clapham Sect have been credited with playing a significant part in the development of Victorian morality through their writings their societies their influence in Parliament and their example in philanthropy and moral campaigns especially against slavery In the words of Tomkins The ethos of Clapham became the spirit of the age 11 248 Members editMembers of the Clapham Sect and those associated with them included 19 Thomas Fowell Buxton 1786 1845 leader of the movement for the abolition of slavery MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis and brewer William Dealtry 1775 1847 Rector of Holy Trinity Church Clapham mathematician Edward James Eliot 1758 97 MP for St Germans and Liskeard Samuel Gardiner 1755 1827 and his wife Mary Boddam of Coombe Lodge Whitchurch on Thames Thomas Gisborne 1758 1846 Prebendary of Durham Cathedral and author Charles Grant 1746 1823 administrator chairman of the directors of the British East India Company father of the first Lord Glenelg Zachary Macaulay 1768 1838 estate manager governor of Sierra Leone father of Thomas Babington Macaulay Hannah More 1745 1833 bluestocking playwright religious writer and philanthropist Granville Sharp 1735 1813 campaigner for social justice scholar and administrator Charles Simeon 1759 1836 Anglican cleric minister of Holy Trinity Church Cambridge promoter of missions William Smith 1756 1835 MP for Sudbury and Norwich James Stephen 1758 1832 Master of Chancery great grandfather of Virginia Woolf Lord Teignmouth 1751 1834 Governor general of India John Thornton 1720 1790 prominent Clapham resident philanthropist and founder member of the group Henry Thornton 1760 1815 economist banker philanthropist Member of Parliament MP for Southwark son of John Thornton and great grandfather of writer E M Forster Marianne Thornton 1797 1887 daughter of Henry Thornton Henry Venn 1725 97 curate of Holy Trinity Church Clapham and founder of the group father of John Venn priest and great grandfather of John Venn originator of the Venn diagram John Venn 1759 1813 Rector of Holy Trinity Church Clapham William Wilberforce 1759 1833 MP for Kingston upon Hull Yorkshire and Bramber abolitionist and leader of the campaign against the slave tradeSee also edit nbsp Christianity portal List of abolitionist forerunnersReferences edit Venn John 8 March 2012 1904 Annals of a Clerical Family Being Some Account of the Family and Descendants of William Venn Vicar of Otterton Devon 1600 1621 Cambridge Library Collection Religion reprint ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108044929 Retrieved 2 December 2022 John Venn was the founder of an evangelical sect at Clapham where his father had also been curate and of the Church Missionary Society Nirmala Sharma 21 March 2016 Unraveling Misconceptions A New Understanding of E M Forster sA Passage to India Xlibris Corporation ISBN 9781514475218 Retrieved 2 December 2022 The Clapham Sect was a group of evangelical reformers that presented a new crystallization of power parliament the Established Church the journals of opinion the universities the City the civil and fighting services the government of the Empire Clapham found a place in them all not infrequently a distinguished one The Clapham Sect was also noted for its advocacy of the abolition of the slave trade Ditchfield G M 2003 1998 The Evangelical Revival Introductions to history reprint ed London Psychology Press ISBN 9781857284812 Retrieved 1 December 2022 Morgan Edmund S 28 June 2017 2015 Visible Saints The History of a Puritan Idea Pickle Partners Publishing ISBN 9781787204683 Retrieved 1 December 2022 Every Englishman had been automatically transformed by government decree into a member of the new Anglican church Twells Alison 17 December 2008 The Civilising Mission and the English Middle Class 1792 1850 The Heathen at Home and Overseas reprint ed Basingstoke Springer p 38 ISBN 9780230234727 Retrieved 1 December 2022 The Claphamites were a group of powerful and influential men associated with the Clapham congregation Bradley Ian C 1976 The Call to Seriousness The Evangelical Impact on the Victorians Cape p 16 ISBN 9780224011624 Retrieved 1 December 2022 the very important contribution made by Nonconformity to British life in the nneteenth century Carter Grayson 2006 Evangelical Religion In Litzenberger C J Lyon Eileen Groth eds The Human Tradition in Modern Britain Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield pp 56 57 ISBN 9780742537354 Retrieved 25 November 2022 By the end of the long eighteenth century 1688 1832 the members of the Clapham Sect were quickly passing from the scene The successors of the Clapham Sect lived at a time of rapid and fundamental social change arising primarily from the continued effects of industrialization various issues challenged in different ways the spiritual aspirations of the evangelical movement producing considerable pressure and even unrest within its ranks As a result during the late 1820s and early 1830s the Gospel movement began to fragment into a number of diverse but not altogether distinct parties and even denominations Examples of millennial and apocalyptic speculation ultra Calvinistic doctrines and even extreme forms of Pentecostalism could now be found among the adherents of evangelical religion leading many traditional evangelicals to lose confidence in the ability of the Gospel movement to bring about the spiritual renewal of the English church and the nation as a whole Ann M Burton British Evangelicals Economic Warfare and the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1794 1810 Anglican and Episcopal History 65 2 1996 197 225 in JSTOR Douglas K Stevenson 1987 American Life and Institutions Stuttgart Germany p 34 Gathro John William Wilberforce and His Circle of Friends CS Lewis Institute Retrieved 31 August 2016 a b c Tomkins 2010 The Clapham Sect How Wilberforce s circle changed Britain Boyd Hilton A Mad Bad Dangerous People England 1783 1846 2006 p 175 The role of the Clapham Sect in the fight for the abolition of slavery Art UK 10 August 2020 Retrieved 20 December 2020 Am I Not a Woman and a Sister The National Archives Retrieved 20 December 2020 History British History in depth Women From Abolition to the Vote BBC 23 January 2007 Retrieved 20 December 2020 a b Scotland Nigel 29 January 2020 The social work of the Clapham Sect an assessment The Gospel Coalition Retrieved 20 December 2020 History William Wilberforce BBC 7 November 2006 Retrieved 20 December 2020 Gathro Richard 2001 William Wilberforce and His Circle of Friends Knowing amp Doing C S Lewis Institute originally appeared in the Summer 2001 issue of the C S Lewis Institute Report David Spring The Clapham Sect Some Social and Political Aspects Victorian Studies 5 1 1961 35 48 Further reading editBrown Ford K Fathers of the Victorians The Age of Wilberforce 1961 Burton Ann M British Evangelicals Economic Warfare and the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1794 1810 Anglican and Episcopal History 65 2 1996 197 225 in JSTOR Butler Ryan J Transatlantic Discontinuity The Clapham Sect s Influence in the United States Church history 88 no 3 2019 672 695 Cowper William The Better Hour Is Near Wilberforce And Transformative Religion Evangelical History Association Lecture 2013 online Danker Ryan Nicholas Wesley and the Anglicans Political Division in Early Evangelicalism InterVarsity Press 2016 Hennell Michael John Venn and the Clapham Sect 1958 Hilton Boyd The Age of Atonement The Influence of Evangelicalism on Social and Economic Thought 1795 1865 1988 Hilton Boyd A Mad Bad Dangerous People England 1783 1846 2006 pp 174 88 passim Himmelfarb Gertrude From Clapham to Bloomsbury A Genealogy of Morals Commentary 79 2 1985 36 Howse Ernest Marshall Saints in Politics The Clapham Sect and the Growth of Freedom University of Toronto Press 1952 Klein Milton M Amazing Grace John Thornton amp the Clapham Sect 2004 160 pp Major Andrea 2012 Slavery Abolitionism and Empire in India 1772 1843 Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 1 84631 758 3 Spring David The Clapham Sect Some Social and Political Aspects Victorian Studies 5 1 1961 35 48 in JSTOR Tomkins Stephen The Clapham Sect How Wilberforce s Circle Changed Britain Oxford Lion Hudson 2010 Tomkins Stephen William Wilberforce A Biography Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 2007 Ward William Reginald The Protestant Evangelical Awakening Cambridge University Press 2002 Wolffe John Clapham Sect act 1792 1815 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2005 online edn Oct 2016 accessed 13 Nov 2017External links editThe Clapham Group 1701 1800 Church History Timeline William Wilberforce 1759 1833 The Shrimp Who Stopped Slavery by Christopher D Hancock William Wilberforce condoned slavery Colonial Office papers reveal The Guardian Davies Caroline Monday 2 August 2010 Do gooders in 1790s London The Economist Aug 26th 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clapham Sect amp oldid 1201349422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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