William Wilberforce, Esq., MP

African nations did nothing to end the slave trade. Young White Males in Great Britain and the United States did.

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William Wilberforce, Esq., MP

January 19, 2026
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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President Donald Trump Initiates and Signs into Law $255 Permanent Annual Funding to HBCU’s

Wilberforce University is the first private Historically Black College and University (HBCU) in the U.S., founded in 1856 by the Methodist Episcopal Church, making it the first institution of higher learning founded, owned, and operated by African Americans. While not the absolute first HBCU overall (that distinction belongs to Lincoln University in Pennsylvania), Wilberforce was the first private one and holds the unique distinction as the first to graduate Black students with accredited bachelor’s degrees in 1857, preceding Lincoln.

William Wilberforce (1759–1833) is the first name in the abolitionist movement in the Anglosphere; with Abraham Lincoln to follow.  Accordingly, the first Historically Black College and University in the United States is named after him.  Driven by his evangelical Christian faith, Wilberforce took up the cause in 1787 to abolish the British transatlantic slave trade which routinely faced resistance from African rulers in Lagos (modern Nigeria) and the; among them and the Kingdom of Dahomey (modern Benin).
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Why is William Wilberforce often ignored in American history books?

William Wilberforce, the British MP who led the decades-long parliamentary campaign that resulted in the 1807 abolition of the British slave trade (and later full emancipation in 1833), is frequently overlooked in American history textbooks and education.  We remind the education industry in the United States that the spark for ending slavery everywhere in the world originated with the Holy Trinity Church on Clapham Common in South London.

This omission stems primarily from national focus: U.S. history curricula emphasize domestic events and figures in the fight against American slavery. The narrative centers on the U.S. Constitution’s compromises, the Missouri Compromise, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, John Brown, and especially Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War. British abolition, while influential and inspirational to American abolitionists, is seen as foreign history.

Additionally, the American story is framed as a uniquely national struggle involving internal conflict, sectionalism, and civil war—rather than parliamentary reform led by an evangelical Christian in another country. Some historians note a broader “forgetfulness” about the transatlantic abolition movement after the Civil War, as America focused on reconciliation and downplayed slavery’s moral dimensions.

Wilberforce’s heroic role is sidelined because American education prioritizes homegrown heroes and the violent path to emancipation in the United States over Britain’s earlier, legislative success.

 

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University of Hull Wilberforce Institute 

 

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