Person    | Male  Born 2/5/1768  Died 13/5/1838

Zachary Macaulay

Anti-slavery campaigner. Born Scotland. Aged 16 emigrated to Jamaica and saw slavery first hand as a slave overseer on a sugar plantation. Returned to England 1789. Sister Jean’s husband, Thomas Babington, introduced him to the evangelical Christian Clapham Sect which included William Wilberforce and other abolitionists. Sent to work as an administrator in Sierra Leone, at a colony set up as a home for emancipated slaves. Governor of Freetown in Sierra Leone 1794 - 99.

Back in England he was part of the campaign against the slave trade, abolished in the British Empire in 1807. Later a leading campaigner against slavery itself. 1825 founded the monthly Anti-slavery Reporter which analysed and exposed the enormities of slavery. It not only provided abolitionist MPs with evidence to counter slave owner claims that conditions in the West Indies were improving. It also turned the abolition cause into a mass movement, groups across the country subscribing to the Reporter, petitioning Parliament and organising boycotts of West Indian sugar.

Has been called the unsung hero of the abolition movement. 1833, as the Parliamentary fight was won, Thomas Fowell Buxton, leader of the abolitionists when Wilberforce retired in 1825, wrote to Macaulay: “My sober and deliberate opinion is that you have done more towards this consummation than any other man. For myself, I take pleasure in acknowledging that you have been my tutor all the way and that I could have done nothing without you.”.

Father of Thomas Babington Macaulay. Commemorated with a bust in Westminster Abbey.

The usually trustworthy Oxford Dictionary of National Biography has him buried in Mecklenburgh Square which has never even been a burial ground, so we believe that information to be false. The same source reports that he died at his lodgings in Clarges Street, W1, not Bloomsbury.

Much of this information has been provided by Friends of St George's Gardens and we are very grateful for their assistance.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Zachary Macaulay

Commemorated ati

Buxton Memorial Fountain

Due to strong shadows it was only on our fourth visit that we managed to take...

Read More

Holy Trinity Clapham - Clapham Sect

The damage on this plaque is the result of WW2 bombs.

Read More

Two Macaulays

Zachary Macaulay (1768 - 1838), philanthropist, and his son Thomas Babington ...

Read More

Zachary Macaulay - WC1

Zachary Macaulay FRS, 1768 - 1838, anti-slavery activist, statistician, one o...

Read More

Other Subjects

Horst Dohm

Horst Dohm

Politician. District mayor of Berlin-Wilmersdorf from 1981 to 1996.

Person, Politics & Administration, Germany

1 memorial
Sir David Floyd Ewin

Sir David Floyd Ewin

Consultant and Trustee of St Pauls in 1979. Our colleague Andrew Behan has kindly researched this man: His full name was Sir David Ernest Thomas Floyd Ewin and he was the youngest of ten children ...

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Sir John Cass

Sir John Cass

Tory politician, slave trader and philanthropist. Date of birth unknown so we use his date of baptism, which took place at St Botolph, Aldgate. 1705 became a director of the Royal African Company w...

Person, Philanthropy, Politics & Administration, Race Issues

2 memorials
Rahere

Rahere

Founded St Bartholomew's Hospital and Priory in 1123, including the church of St Bartholomew the Great, following a vow made while sick on a pilgrimage to Rome. Prior to that he had been a courtier...

Person, Medicine, Politics & Administration

2 memorials
Lakshmi Niwas Mittal

Lakshmi Niwas Mittal

Trustee of The Memorial Gates Trust. Lakshmi Niwas Mittal was born on 15 June 1950 in Sadulpur, Rajasthan, India. Our Picture Source gives details about the life of this man.

Person, Benefactor, Commerce, Politics & Administration, India

1 memorial