Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Three historians disagree about why Britain ended the slave trade in 1807 and freed slaves in 1834. Eric Williams says it was mostly for economic reasons because the colonies were becoming costly and inefficient. Seymour Drescher argues that large popular movements and moral pressure show it wasn’t just about money. David Eltis combines these views, saying Britain’s economy changed so that paid workers and new consumer markets became more useful than forced labor, and those economic shifts helped persuade leaders to support abolition.
Logic Breakdown
Compare statements by Drescher and Eltis about the social breadth of support/impact for abolition; locate language indicating support across classes.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage26.The information in the passage suggests that Eltis and Drescher agree that
Correct Answer
A
Drescher: "Drescher has reconstructed the populist characteristics of British abolitionism, which appears to have cut across lines of class, party, and religion." (para. 2). Eltis: "Significantly, it was products grown by slaves, such as sugar, coffee, and tobacco, that stimulated new wants at all levels of British society" (para. 3). Together these passages indicate both scholars see abolition-related sentiment or effects extending across social classes.
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