The Mail on Sunday

Lord Ashcroft pledges £25k for memorial to Navy slave trade busters

- By Barbara Davies ● If you’d like to contribute towards the memorial, go to justgiving.com/ crowdfundi­ng/WestAfrica­Squadron

A RALLYING cry for a memorial to recognise Britain’s contributi­on to ending the slave trade was answered last night by Conservati­ve peer Lord Ashcroft.

The military historian pledged £25,000 to a campaign to honour the Royal Navy’s West Africa Squadron, which once patrolled the Atlantic, seizing slave ships and freeing enslaved people.

The campaign to honour those who saved captives bound for the Americas was highlighte­d in the Daily Mail yesterday by Commons Leader and Portsmouth North MP Penny Mordaunt.

Campaigner­s are seeking to raise £70,000 for a permanent statue honouring the squadron in Portsmouth, which served as its base in the 19th century.

‘I am delighted to be able to support this worthy campaign,’ said Lord Ashcroft, the former deputy chairman of the Conservati­ve Party. ‘I believe passionate­ly in the importance of highlighti­ng episodes of gallantry by our Armed Forces.

‘For too long, Britain’s role in helping to abolish the slave trade has been forgotten. It’s time we remembered the part that our nation played on the global stage in this little-known chapter of British naval history. It’s something we should all be proud of.’

The West Africa Squadron policed the coast of West Africa between 1807 and 1867 in search of slave traders. At its height in the 1840s and 1850s, the squadron employed 36 vessels and more than 4,000 men. It freed 150,000 people and captured 1,600 slave ships, but 1,600 British sailors lost their lives, with many dying from injuries sustained in combat with the slavers.

Writing in yesterday’s Daily Mail, Ms Mordaunt said that, contrary to what many young people believed, the UK played a key role in dismantlin­g the slave trade, adding: ‘This flotilla was the main actor in physically destroying it.’

Ms Mordaunt told The Mail on Sunday she was delighted to hear of Lord Ashcroft’s donation, adding: ‘Many who establishe­d the campaign were researchin­g their relatives who were part of the squadron. The memorial will mean so much to them.’

The campaign comes amid growing calls for the removal of artefacts with links to the slave trade. But almost nothing has been said about Britain’s role in stamping it out.

The West Africa Squadron Memorial Fund was launched last year by Colin Kemp, 76, from Chichester. Award-winning sculptor Vincent Gray designed a statue, comprising figures of a shackled woman, a naval officer and a freed slave. Ms Mordaunt will unveil a model in Parliament this month.

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Nicholas Condy’s painting of a slave ship being captured by a West Africa Squadron vessel. Inset, Lord Ashcroft
PRIDE: Nicholas Condy’s painting of a slave ship being captured by a West Africa Squadron vessel. Inset, Lord Ashcroft

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