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159:. She would not able to join the Anti-Slavery Society, despite it being part founded by her father as only men were allowed to join. She could hear her father speak in parliament but only on the condition that she heard it via a ventilation shaft. Only voters (and other men) were allowed to spectate in the houses of Parliament. Women could raise petitions and Buxton was one of the first of 187,000 that she helped to organise in 1833 against slavery. The petition took two people to carry it, it was the largest ever abolitionist petition and it was laughed at in parliament.
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Buxton served as her fathers special assistant as he led the campaign to end slavery in the
British colonies. She also help organise help for educational missionary work in Africa. She was not her father's servant, it was noted that she not only solved problems but also anticipated and identified
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Her husband and her father lost their seats in the 1837 election. She and Andrew went to Fife and then returned south where Andrew took a job in the Gurney's Bank. Priscilla died in 1852.
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124:. She was co-secretary of the London Female Anti-Slavery Society. In 1833 a petition of 187,000 women's signatures were presented to parliament to end slavery. The first two names were
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Clare
Midgley, βBuxton , Priscilla (1808β1852)β, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Sept 2015
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174:. They chose to get married on 1 August 1834 which was the day that the majority of slaves in the British Empire were legally freed.
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Buxton has a plaque raised by Cromer council which advertises their museum. Buxton's journal and letters were published in 1862.
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in
Norfolk in 1808. Her parents were Hannah (born Gurney) and Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, first baronet. Her maternal aunt was
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who was an ally of her father. Johnston had stood in the reformed
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271:, 23 August 2015, Historic England, Retrieved 26 June 2017
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Women
Against Slavery: The British Campaigns, 1780β1870
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Extracts from
Priscilla Johnston's Journal and Letters
185:(the son of his younger son Fowell Buxton Johnston).
311:The royal lineage of our noble and gentle families
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286:British parliamentary election results 1832β1885
177:They had four children. They were parents of MP
120:(25 February 1808 β 18 June 1852) was a British
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128:and Priscilla Buxton.
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258:accessed 26 June 2017
200:Blue plaque in Cromer
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168:1832 general election
16:British abolitionist
136:Buxton was born in
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146:Joseph John Gurney
144:and her uncle was
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232:978-0-415-12708-0
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348:1808 births
309:Foster, J.
126:Amelia Opie
76:Nationality
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208:References
49:1808-02-25
284:(1989) .
108:Children
79:British
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132:Life
64:Died
43:Born
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