The immediate effect of the Zong massacre …

Years: 1787 - 1787
The immediate effect of the Zong massacre on public opinion is limited, demonstrating—as the historian of abolitionism Seymour Drescher has noted—the challenge that the early abolitionists face.

Following Sharp's efforts, the Zong massacre will become an important topic in abolitionist literature and the massacre is discussed in works by Thomas Clarkson, Ottobah Cugoano, James Ramsay and (from 1788) John Newton.

The Zong killings offer a powerful example of the horrors of the slave trade, stimulating the development of the abolitionist movement in Britain, which dramatically expands in size and influence in the late 1780s.

In 1787, the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade is founded.

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