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Send Back the Money!
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An investigation of Scotland’s role in the abolition of slavery, focussing on the Free Church of Scotland schism over funding from American slave states.When the Free Church broke from the Church o...
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29 November 2012

An investigation of Scotland’s role in the abolition of slavery, focussing on the Free Church of Scotland schism over funding from American slave states.
When the Free Church broke from the Church of Scotland in 1843 they sought money and support from inside and outside Scotland. A delegation which went to America in 1844 brought some money back gifted by sympathisers in the Southern slave states. A huge row broke out amongst abolitionists in Scotland and America and a campaign to ‘Send Back the Money’ was launched.
‘Send Back the Money!’ is a thorough and gripping examination of a fascinating and forgotten aspect of Scottish and American relations and Church history, recreating a seminal episode in the history of nineteenth-century abolitionism that divided families, communities, and the Free Church itself.
Iain Whyte’s examination of the Free Church of Scotland’s early involvement with American Presbyterianism reveals the ethical furore caused by a Church wishing to emancipate itself from the domination of a state-sanctioned established religion. The Free Church therefore found a ready affinity with those oppressed elsewhere, but subsequently found itself financially supported by the Southern slave states of America. Whyte sensitively handles this inherent contradiction in the political, ecclesiastical, and theological institutions, while informing the reader of the roles of charismatic characters such as Thomas Chalmers and Frederick Douglass, key individuals who did much to shape contemporary culture with action, great oratory, and rhetoric. The author adroitly draws parallels from the twentieth century onwards, leading the reader to a fuller and more nuanced understanding of the historic and topical issues within global Christianity, and the contentious topic of slavery.
‘Send back the Money!’ throws light upon nineteenth-century culture, the British and American Abolitionist movements, and the ecclesiastical politics of the day, and is written in a clear and engaging style that makes the book ideal for both scholars and general readers.
When the Free Church broke from the Church of Scotland in 1843 they sought money and support from inside and outside Scotland. A delegation which went to America in 1844 brought some money back gifted by sympathisers in the Southern slave states. A huge row broke out amongst abolitionists in Scotland and America and a campaign to ‘Send Back the Money’ was launched.
‘Send Back the Money!’ is a thorough and gripping examination of a fascinating and forgotten aspect of Scottish and American relations and Church history, recreating a seminal episode in the history of nineteenth-century abolitionism that divided families, communities, and the Free Church itself.
Iain Whyte’s examination of the Free Church of Scotland’s early involvement with American Presbyterianism reveals the ethical furore caused by a Church wishing to emancipate itself from the domination of a state-sanctioned established religion. The Free Church therefore found a ready affinity with those oppressed elsewhere, but subsequently found itself financially supported by the Southern slave states of America. Whyte sensitively handles this inherent contradiction in the political, ecclesiastical, and theological institutions, while informing the reader of the roles of charismatic characters such as Thomas Chalmers and Frederick Douglass, key individuals who did much to shape contemporary culture with action, great oratory, and rhetoric. The author adroitly draws parallels from the twentieth century onwards, leading the reader to a fuller and more nuanced understanding of the historic and topical issues within global Christianity, and the contentious topic of slavery.
‘Send back the Money!’ throws light upon nineteenth-century culture, the British and American Abolitionist movements, and the ecclesiastical politics of the day, and is written in a clear and engaging style that makes the book ideal for both scholars and general readers.
Price: $29.99
Pages: 176
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date:
29 November 2012
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.93 in
ISBN: 9780227173893
Format: Paperback
Iain Whyte's study of this little known episode in Scottish history makes for an engrossing read. [...] Popular ballads and songs, many written in a lively and earthy Scots, contrasted dry theological argument. Dr Whyte captures the excitement and emotion of these times.[...]...excellent...
— Dr James Robertson, University of Glasgow
...An accessible, scholarly, and enjoyably-readable monograph[...] ...A fine miniature of the perils of moral decision-making...
— David Cornick
...In 'Send Back the Money!' Iain Whyte has pulled off the difficult feat of making a piece of pure historical research amusing as well as enlightening. Reading his book, we can hear those passionate Nineteenth Century voices and their echoes today...
— Richard Holloway, author and former Bishop of Edinburgh
Iain Whyte gives us a book here whose absorbing story echoes far beyond its immediate space and time of Scotland and the USA before the American Civil War. It is a lesson, often tragic, of the international demands on the conscience of moral men and women, and the perpetual temptation to ignore cruelty beyond our own horizons. But God knows no frontiers.
— Owen Dudley Edwards, Reader at the University of Edinburgh, Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
— Dr James Robertson, University of Glasgow
...An accessible, scholarly, and enjoyably-readable monograph[...] ...A fine miniature of the perils of moral decision-making...
— David Cornick
...In 'Send Back the Money!' Iain Whyte has pulled off the difficult feat of making a piece of pure historical research amusing as well as enlightening. Reading his book, we can hear those passionate Nineteenth Century voices and their echoes today...
— Richard Holloway, author and former Bishop of Edinburgh
Iain Whyte gives us a book here whose absorbing story echoes far beyond its immediate space and time of Scotland and the USA before the American Civil War. It is a lesson, often tragic, of the international demands on the conscience of moral men and women, and the perpetual temptation to ignore cruelty beyond our own horizons. But God knows no frontiers.
— Owen Dudley Edwards, Reader at the University of Edinburgh, Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: A Church with Freedom but no Money
1. A Delegation Warmly Received
2. The Elephant in the Room
3. Chalmers and Smyth – Tensions across the Atlantic
4. Keeping a Lid on the Volcano
5. ‘Douglass has blawn sic a flame’
6. War, Drink, the Sabbath, and the 1846 Assembly
7. Ballads and Broadsheets
8. The Irish take a Firmer Stand
9. Evangelicals and Abolitionists – Houses Divided
10. The Last Batt les and Hunting ‘the Brave Macbeth’
11. A Passing Storm in a Teacup or the Shape of Things to Come?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: A Church with Freedom but no Money
1. A Delegation Warmly Received
2. The Elephant in the Room
3. Chalmers and Smyth – Tensions across the Atlantic
4. Keeping a Lid on the Volcano
5. ‘Douglass has blawn sic a flame’
6. War, Drink, the Sabbath, and the 1846 Assembly
7. Ballads and Broadsheets
8. The Irish take a Firmer Stand
9. Evangelicals and Abolitionists – Houses Divided
10. The Last Batt les and Hunting ‘the Brave Macbeth’
11. A Passing Storm in a Teacup or the Shape of Things to Come?
Notes
Bibliography
Index