Pay up, reparations campaigners tell family of British ex-PM Gladstone

London’s first memorial to the Transatlantic Slave Trade was unveiled in Gladstone Park, a park is named after former Prime Minister Sir William Gladstone, whose family owed plantations in the Caribbean.

William Ewart Gladstone, the last Liberal Prime Minister, whose family profited from slavery (Photo by Universal History Archive/Getty Images)

THE DESCENDANTS of former Victorian Prime Minister William Gladstone are being urged to pay reparations to Jamaica.

The Gladstone family recently issued an apology to Guyana for the family’s involvement in slavery in the country and said they would aim to donate £100,000 to a university.

But now, the family has been accused of ignoring its links to slavery in Jamaica.

Speaking to the BBC, the family said: At the moment we are solely focused on Guyana.”

“There is a huge amount to do here  [in Guyana],” the Gladstones said.

Last year, London’s first memorial to the Transatlantic Slave Trade was unveiled in Gladstone Park, a park is named after former Prime Minister Sir William Gladstone, whose family owed plantations in the Caribbean.

John Gladstone, father of the former PM, was paid £106,000 compensation after abolition of slavery – which is believed to be worth at least £17m today.

He received the largest of all compensation payments made by the Slave Compensation Commission.

According to records on the Legacies of British Slavery database, John Gladstone owned over 2,500 enslaved Africans in both Guyana and Jamaica.

But at a ceremony at the University of Guyana, in Gerogetown, the family apologised and vowed to make donations, but there was no mention of the family’s historical slavery links to Jamaica.

Speaking to the news corporation, Verene Shepherd, director of the Centre for Reparation Research at the University of the West Indies said the Gladstone family must “commit to reparations, as they’re doing in Guyana”.

Speaking at the event, direct descendant of the former Prime Minister, Charles Gladstone, said: “It is with deep shame and regret that we acknowledge our ancestors involvement in this crime and with heartfelt sincerity, that we apologise to the descendants of the enslaved in Guyana.

“In so doing, we acknowledge slavery’s continuing impact on the daily lives of many.”

According to reports the family have donated £100,000 to the University of Guyana’s International Institute for Migration and Diaspora Studies.

Mr Gladstone joined campaign group Heirs of Slavery, which is made up of descendants of plantation owners and enslavers.

The group say they want Britain to face up to “the ongoing consequences of this crime against humanity.”

Earlier this year, BBC journalist Laura Trevelyan announced she was leaving the corporation – after thirty years – to join the Caribbean’s fight for slavery reparations.

This came a few weeks after Ms Trevelyan and other members of her family apologised for their ancestor’s role in slavery on the Caribbean island of Grenada.  

Caribbean leaders have been calling for reparations for some time from former colonial powers.

In September 2022, leading Jamaican politician Lisa Hanna urged Britain to pay reparations for its role in slavery.

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley has also told The Voice that now was the time for reparations.

Comments Form

1 Comment

  1. | Chaka Artwell

    His Majesty’s politically leaderless African-Caribbean heritage Subjects, desperately require a regional, and national Parliamentary Political Lobby.

    We suffer Parliamentary: Judicial, and Political injustice, and marginalisation, as a direct absence of a Parliamentary Political Lobby; exclusively for His Majesty’s African-Caribbean heritage Subjects.

    The Home Office’s illegal persecution, and illegal exiling to the Caribbean of over eighty of His Majesty’s African-Caribbean heritage senior people in 2018, would not have been possible with the creation of a Parliamentary Lobby: exclusively for African-Caribbean heritage Subjects.

    Some of the compensation being offered from England’s African Slave owning families, ought to be used to fund a Parliamentary Lobby, exclusively for His Majesty’s African-Caribbean heritage Subjects.

    Since Sir Tony Blair organised the abolition of the Commission for Racial Equality (CRE), with the assistance of Sir Trevor Phillips in 2006, His Majesty’s African-Caribbean Subjects have been without statutory assistance.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*

Support The Voice

The Voice Newspaper is committed to celebrating black excellence, campaigning for positive change and informing the black community on important issues. Your financial contributions are essential to protect the future of the publication as we strive to help raise the profile of the black communities across the UK. Any size donation is welcome and we thank you for your continued support.

Support Sign-up