Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

The Law and Custom of Slavery in British India, in a Series of Letters to Thomas Fowell Buxton, Esq.

View original record

William Adam (author, 1796–1881)
Bound volume
Boston, Massachusetts: Weeks, Jordan, & Company, 1840
Brown University Library, Lincoln Collection


American merchants conducted most of their business in British-controlled ports like Madras and Calcutta, where race functioned as the organizing principle, further fueled by caste and religious division in India. This social structure resonated with American merchants who faced mounting racial tensions over the slavery of Black peoples at home. American clergyman and abolitionist William Adam highlighted these comparisons in letters published in 1840, shortly before Boston East Indian merchants arranged his appointment as Professor of Oriental Linguistics at Harvard. Adam warned of British complacency. Even though the British Empire had ended slavery in the West Indies, slavery and racial inequities in India remained unchanged. American traveler Bayard Tayor writes in A Visit to India (1862), “Why is it that the virtue of Exeter Hall and Stafford House can tolerate this without a blush, yet condemn, with pharisaic zeal, the social inequality of the negro and white races in America?”