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  1. Granville Sharp was born on 10 November 1735 in Durham. He was one of eight children and his father was a clergyman. At 15, Sharp was apprenticed to a London linen draper and then went to work as ...

  2. Granville Sharp was a leading early abolitionist in England and one of the founders of The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade which was formed in 1787. The society worked to educate the public about the abuses of the slave trade and finally achieved abolition of the international slave trade in 1807. Personal Life & Legacy.

    • Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, 1787. The Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade was formed in London on 22 May 1787. This was the first non-denominational committee, where different religious groups came together to strengthen their purpose.
    • Thomas Clarkson. Thomas Clarkson visited ports such as Bristol and Liverpool to collect evidence from over 20,000 sailors who worked on the slave trade.
    • Granville Sharp. Granville Sharp was a deeply religious man and founding member of the Society. His main contribution to the abolition movement was his ability to use the law in the struggle against the slave trade.
    • Olaudah Equiano. Olaudah Equiano attended many public meetings as part of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade. He gave first-hand accounts on his life as an enslaved person.
  3. Died: July 6, 1813, Fulham, London (aged 77) Granville Sharp (born Nov. 10 [Nov. 21, New Style], 1735, Durham, Durham, Eng.—died July 6, 1813, Fulham, London) was an English scholar and philanthropist, noted as an advocate of the abolition of slavery. Granville was apprenticed to a London draper, but in 1758 he entered the government ordnance ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Granville Sharp. Granville Sharp, the ninth and youngest son of Thomas Sharp (1693–1758) and his wife, Judith Wheler,was born in Durham on 10th November 1735. The son of the archdeacon of Northumberland, and the grandson of John Sharp, the Archbishop of York, he decided against a career in the Church of England and instead served an ...

  5. Granville Sharp was a legal campaigner against the slave trade. He was most famous for achieving a ruling in 1772 that slaves could not be forced to return to colonies once they were in Britain. Scroll to the answer

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  7. Granville Sharp. One of the 12 men who formed the Committee for Effecting the Abolition of the African Slave Trade in 1787 at 2 George Yard was Granville Sharp (from 1735 to 1813). Sharp was a civil servant who devoted much of his life to campaigning against slavery. His contemporaries often described him as 'the father of the Cause'.

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