Since 1987, October has been designated as “Black History Month” in the United Kingdom. This is an annual opportunity to reflect specifically on the men and women of the African diaspora, and to commemorate their courage and contributions. Over the course of the rest of the month, I will be publishing brief articles relevant to black history month - especially but not necessarily limited to short biographies of often neglected or largely forgotten black men in Britain that I hope might prompt further reading and research.
Somewhere among the many graves in Stoke Newington, London’s
crumbling and overgrown Abney Park Cemetery stands a grave stone to
THOMAS CANRY CAULKER,
A native of Western Africa,
Son of
Canrah Bah Caulker,
King of Bompey
Its subject was only thirteen when he died, but
his name tells an obscure yet significant story.
“Caulker” is a corruption of “Corker”, and
“Thomas” was a name carried by several in the Caulker family back to Thomas
Corker. Thomas Corker was born in Falmouth, Cornwall in 1669. In 1684 he became
a trader and Royal Africa Company agent in the Sherbro region of Sierra Leone,
where he married an African Princess of the house of Ya Kumba, known as Seniora
Doll. They had two sons, Robin and Stephen, before Thomas was relocated to
Gambia in 1699 and died on a visit to England in 1700. Seniora Doll died in
1722 leaving her kingdom to Robin and Stephen, who leveraged their combined
European and African heritage for greater power and influence. The Caulkers
would become a clan particularly feared for their involvement in the slave
trade, which was thriving in Sherbro as early as 1740. John Newton set up his
base of operations for slave trading in that region, before he later repented
of his slave trading, became a minister and hymn-writer (most famously of
Amazing Grace), and supported the abolitionist movement.
Over a century of rivalry and bloodshed passed,
and around 30,000 African men and women a year were exported from Sherbro alone
during the height of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. Laws were passed,
applicable to all those within the British Empire and under its oversight, but
that does not necessarily mean they were kept. 1807 saw the Slave Trade
Abolition Act but traffic nonetheless continued. The Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 made not only trading but owning slaves illegal throughout the Empire,
with a few exceptions. But there was still demand, and so long as the demand
was there, so too were willing suppliers. The Royal Navy’s West Africa Squadron
was set up in 1808 to combat this, and it is estimated that between 1808 and
1860 1,600 slave-trading ships were seized and 150,000 Africans were freed. It is sometimes claimed - particularly by less than helpful racial commentators in the USA - that because laws have changed, there is no such thing as systemic racism: surely the persistence of slave trafficking and slavery after Abolition Acts is a strong historical argument for the naïve short-sightedness of such a claim.
An effort was made in 1825 by the British governor
of Sierra Leone to make a treaty with the Sherbro chiefs, to stop their
infighting and slave-trading. The governor however took ill and died, putting a
stop to the process. Nonetheless, the gradual advance of Christianity among the
Sherbro, which would accelerate after 1850, turned the factions of the Caulker
clan to the side of abolition.
Thomas Canry Caulker was born in 1846 to Richard
Canry Caulker, King of the Bumpe Chiefdom. A sickly child, he was sent in the
early 1850s by his father to England for Christian education in the
ecclesiastical context of the Countess of Huntington’s Connexion , and to get
adequate medical care. He stayed with Rev. Kirkman Foster, former president of
a Dissenting Academy.
Around this time, in 1853, Thomas’s father Richard
and relative Thomas Stephen Caulker led other Sherbro chiefs in joining with
the British government to draw up an agreement to assist one another in
suppressing the slave trade, decades after it became illegal. The agreement was
passed into British Law two years later, on 14 August 1855, as “An Act for carrying into effect the Engagements
between Her Majesty and certain Chiefs of the Sherbro Country near Sierra Leone
in Africa, for the more effectual Suppression of the Slave Trade.”
Sadly, Thomas would not live to return to his
father’s chiefdom to see this treaty being implemented, to teach the Christian
Scriptures he was learning, or to see the gospel and social justice take root
in the society of his birth. He progressively lost his sight to the point he
was sent to a school for the blind. The problems went deeper than mere sight,
however, and he died aged thirteen. Rev. Foster and his wife interred his
remains in Abney Park Cemetery, where they too would one day be buried.
For further reading
An Act for carrying into effect the Engagements
between Her Majesty and certain Chiefs of the Sherbro Country near Sierra Leone
in Africa, for the more effectual Suppression of the Slave Trade. http://www.pdavis.nl/Legis_54. htm
John Augustus Abayomi-Cole, Hope of Sherbo’s
Future Greatness 1885 https://en.m.wikisource.org/ wiki/Hope_of_Sherbro%27s_ Future_Greatness
Jo Loosemore, “Sailing against slavery” (BBC
Devon, 28 February 2007). http://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/ content/articles/2007/03/20/ abolition_navy_feature.shtml

Conversation starter: Should Corker/Caulker be honoured in King Charles the Martyr Church in Falmouth? Was he a bad man?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.flickr.com/photos/atoach/9475656522
Thanks for engaging! I'm a nonconformist reformational Particular Baptist pastor, so I believe that in the eyes of God, apart from Christ, we are all bad, and I'm not particularly keen on monuments venerating or exalting people in such a way as distracts from the exaltation of Christ in our places of worship. Reading the Latin inscription to this man, it gives glory to man and not to God:
Delete"Sacred to the memory of Master Thomas Corker who died on September 10th 1700 in the 31st year of his life.
The young man who lies here was a glory to the English and the Africans. Setting forth from this place, performing deeds of war, when defending the Moor from the well-known fortifications of the Gambia, he claimed supreme authority not for himself but for his fatherland. Returning here he brought back ivory and gold and precious timber. Dying, alas, untimely not for himself but for his country, he perished, carried too soon away by an unfair death. Africans and English sadly suffer the loss together. Marble tablets now honour him; he deserved greater things, and that he should stand for ever in this place, himself a man of gold."
My theological objections aside, even humanly speaking Thomas Corker was a bad man - a slave trader. The Scriptures are clear throughout about such a person:
"Whoever steals a man and sells him, and anyone found in possession of him, shall be put to death." Exodus 21:16
"the law is not laid down for the just but for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for...enslavers..." 1 Timothy 1:9-10