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Sarah Forbes Bonetta; as a child given as a gift by the King of Dahomey to Captain Frederick Forbes RN. She was 'respectably' raised in Brighton by Captain Forbes. Her Marriage in August 1862 at St Nicholas' Church, Brighton was reported in the Brighton Examiner and nationally in the Penny Illustrated Paper. |
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A few black people arrived in England as members of the armed forces. Some had joined ships as sailors while others served in the American War of Independence. After the Peace of 1783, many came to London, were unable to find work and joined the distressed poor. Black beggars were known as St Giles blackbirds.
The legal position of black people who had been brought to Britain as slaves remained uncertain until slavery was abolished in 1833. The Church played an important role in the fight against slavery since it was popularly believed that baptism set a slave free. But several court cases failed to resolve the question of whether a West Indian slave became free in England. The Somersett Case of 1772 ruled that a slave could not be deported to the West Indies against his or her will and was widely regarded as the abolition of slavery in Britain. The solution for many black people, however, was self-emancipation or running away.
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