All Topics  
Granville Sharp

 
Granville Sharp

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Granville Sharp



 
 
Granville Sharp (10 November 1735 - 6 July 1813) was one of the first British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 campaigners for the abolition of the slave trade
Abolitionism

File:BLAKE10.JPGAbolitionism was a movement to end the slave trade and emancipate slaves in western Europe and the Americas. The slave system aroused little protest until the 18th century, when rationalist thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment criticized it for violating the rights of man, and Quaker and other evangelical religious groups con...
. He also involved himself in trying to correct other social injustices. Sharp formulated the plan to settle blacks in Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone, officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country in West Africa. It is bordered by Guinea in the northeast, Liberia in the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean in the southwest....
, and founded the St. George's Bay Company, a forerunner of the Sierra Leone Company
Sierra Leone Company

The Sierra Leone Company was the organisation involved in founding the first African American colony in Africa in 1792 through the resettlement of Nova Scotian ex-slaves who had initially been settled in Nova Scotia after the American War of Independence....
.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Granville Sharp'
Start a new discussion about 'Granville Sharp'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Grsharp
Granville Sharp (10 November 1735 - 6 July 1813) was one of the first British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 campaigners for the abolition of the slave trade
Abolitionism

File:BLAKE10.JPGAbolitionism was a movement to end the slave trade and emancipate slaves in western Europe and the Americas. The slave system aroused little protest until the 18th century, when rationalist thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment criticized it for violating the rights of man, and Quaker and other evangelical religious groups con...
. He also involved himself in trying to correct other social injustices. Sharp formulated the plan to settle blacks in Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone, officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country in West Africa. It is bordered by Guinea in the northeast, Liberia in the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean in the southwest....
, and founded the St. George's Bay Company, a forerunner of the Sierra Leone Company
Sierra Leone Company

The Sierra Leone Company was the organisation involved in founding the first African American colony in Africa in 1792 through the resettlement of Nova Scotian ex-slaves who had initially been settled in Nova Scotia after the American War of Independence....
. His efforts led to both the founding of the Province of Freedom, and later on Freetown, Sierra Leone, and so he is considered one of the founding fathers of Sierra Leone. He was also a biblical scholar and classicist
Classicism

File:Nicolas Poussin 055.jpgClassicism, in the The Arts, refers generally to a high regard for classical antiquity, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seeks to emulate....
, and a talented musician.

Life

Granville Sharp was the son of Thomas Sharp (1693-1758), Archdeacon of Northumberland, prolific theological writer and biographer of his father, John Sharp
John Sharp

John Sharp may refer to:*John Sharp *John Sharp , British television actor*John Sharp , Australian politician, member of the Australian House of Representatives...
, Archbishop of York
Archbishop of York

File:Williamtemple1.jpgArchbishop of York is a high-ranking cleric in the Church of England, second only to the Archbishop of Canterbury. He is the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of York and metropolitan bishop of the Province of York, which covers the northern portion of England as well as the Isle of Man....
. Sharp was born at Durham
Durham

Durham is a city in North East England. It lies at the heart of the City of Durham local government district. It is the county town of County Durham....
 in 1735. He had eight older brothers and five younger sisters. Five of his brothers survived their infancy and by the time Sharp had reached his mid-teens the family funds set aside for their education had been all but depleted, so Sharp was educated at Durham School
Durham School

Durham School is an independent British day and boarding school for girls and boys in Durham. It was founded by at least 1414 , and refounded by Henry VIII of England during the Protestant Reformation in 1541....
 but mainly at home.

He was apprenticed to a London linen-draper at the age of fifteen. Sharp loved to argue and debate, and his keen intellect found little outlet in the mundane work in which he was involved. However, one of his fellow-apprentices was a Socinian
Socinianism

Socinianism is a form of Antitrinitarianism, named for Laelius Socinus and of his nephew Faustus Socinus ....
 (a Christian sect that denied the divinity of Christ and took its reasoning from the original Greek of the New Testament), and in order better to argue, Sharp taught himself Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
. Another fellow apprentice was Jewish, and so Sharp learned Hebrew
Hebrew language

Hebrew is a Semitic languages of the Afro-Asiatic languages. Modern Hebrew is spoken by more than seven million people in Israel and Classical Hebrew is used for prayer or study in Jews communities around the world....
 in order to be able to discuss theological matters with his co-worker. Sharp also conducted genealogical research for one of his masters, Henry Willoughby, who had a claim to the barony of Willoughby de Parham
Baron Willoughby of Parham

Baron Willoughby of Parham was a title in the Peerage of England. It was created on 20 February 1547 for William Willoughby, 1st Baron Willoughby of Parham, a descendant of William Willoughby, 5th Baron Willoughby de Eresby....
, and it was through Sharp's work that Willoughby was able to take his place in the House of Lords.

Sharp's apprenticeship ended in 1757, and both his parents died a year later. That same year he accepted a position as Clerk in the Ordnance Office at the Tower of London
Tower of London

Her Majesty's Royal Palace and Fortress, more commonly known as the Tower of London , is a historic monument in central London, England, on the north bank of the River Thames....
. This civil service position allowed him plenty of free time to pursue his scholarly and intellectual pursuits.

, 1779-81, National Portrait Gallery, London. The family musical ensemble are pictured on their barge, Apollo, with All Saints Church, Fulham
All Saints Church, Fulham

All Saints Church, Fulham is an Anglican Church in Fulham, London sited close to the river Thames, beside the northern approach to Putney Bridge....
 in the background. Granville Sharp is the male figure in the centre.]]

Sharp had a keen musical interest. Four of his siblings - William, later to become surgeon to George III
George III of the United Kingdom

George III was Kingdom of Great Britain and Kingdom of Ireland from 25 October 1760 until the union of these two countries on 1 January 1801, after which he was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until his death....
, James, Elizabeth and Judith - had also come to London, and they met every day. They all played musical instruments as a family orchestra, giving concerts at William's house in Mincing Lane
Mincing Lane

Mincing Lane is a street in the City of London, stretching from Fenchurch Street south to Great Tower Street.Its name is a corruption of Mynchen Lane - so-called from the tenements held there by the Benedictine 'mynchens' or nuns of St Helen's Bishopsgate ....
 and later in the family sailing barge, Apollo, which was moored at the Bishop of London's steps in Fulham
Fulham

Fulham is an area of south-west London in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, located south west of Charing Cross. It is situated in between Putney and Chelsea, London....
, near William's country home, Fulham House. The fortnightly water-borne concerts took place from 1775-1783, the year his brother James died. Sharp had an excellent bass voice, described by George III as "the best in Britain", and he played the clarinet, oboe, flageolet, kettle drums, harp and a double-flute which he had made himself. He often signed his name in notes to friends as G
Note

In music, the term note has two primary meanings: 1) a sign used in musical notation to represent the relative duration and pitch of a sound; and 2) a pitched sound itself....
#
Sharp (music)

In music, sharp means higher in pitch. More specifically, in musical notation, sharp means "higher in pitch by a semitone ," and has an associated symbol , which is often confused with the number sign ....
.

Sharp died at Fulham House on 6 July 1813, and a memorial of him was erected in Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey

The Collegiate Church of St Peter at Westminster, which is almost always referred to popularly and informally as Westminster Abbey, is a large, mainly Gothic architecture Church , in Westminster, London, just to the west of the Palace of Westminster....
. He lived in Fulham
Fulham

Fulham is an area of south-west London in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, located south west of Charing Cross. It is situated in between Putney and Chelsea, London....
, London, and was buried in the churchyard of All Saints Church, Fulham
All Saints Church, Fulham

All Saints Church, Fulham is an Anglican Church in Fulham, London sited close to the river Thames, beside the northern approach to Putney Bridge....
. The vicar would not allow a funeral sermon to be preached in the church because Sharp had been involved with the British and Foreign Bible Society
British and Foreign Bible Society

The British and Foreign Bible Society, often known in England and Wales as simply as the Bible Society, is a non-denominational Christian Charitable organization that exists to make the Bible available throughout the world....
, which was Nonconformist.

Abolitionism

Sharp is best known for his untiring efforts for the abolition of slavery
Abolitionism

File:BLAKE10.JPGAbolitionism was a movement to end the slave trade and emancipate slaves in western Europe and the Americas. The slave system aroused little protest until the 18th century, when rationalist thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment criticized it for violating the rights of man, and Quaker and other evangelical religious groups con...
, although he was involved in many other causes, fired by a dislike of any social or legal injustice.

Sharp's first involvement: Jonathan Strong


Sharp's brother William held a regular surgery for the local poor at his surgery at Mincing Lane, and one day in 1765 when Sharp was visiting, he met Jonathan Strong. Strong was a young black slave from Barbados who had been so badly beaten by his master, David Lisle, a lawyer, that he had been cast out into the street as useless. Sharp and his brother tended to his injuries and had him admitted to Barts Hospital, where his injuries were so bad they necessitated a four month stay. The Sharps paid for his treatment and when he was fit enough, found him employment with a Quaker apothecary friend of theirs. In 1767, Lisle saw Strong in the street and had him kidnapped and sold to a planter called James Kerr for £30. Strong was able to get word to Sharp, and in a court attended by the Lord Mayor and the Cotroner of London, Lisle and Kerr were denied possession of Strong. They instituted a court action against Sharp claiming £200 damages for taking their property, and Lisle challenged Sharp to a duel - Sharp told Lisle that he could expect satisfaction from the law.

Sharp consulted lawyers and was horrified to find that as the law stood it favoured the master's rights to his slaves as property, that a slave remained in law the chattel of his master even on English soil. Sharp said "he could not believe the law of England was really so injurious to natural rights." He spent the next two years in intensive study of English law, especially where it applied to the liberty of the individual.

Lisle disappeared from the records early, but Kerr persisted with his suit through eight legal terms before it was dismissed and Kerr was ordered to pay substantial damages for wasting the court's time. Jonathan Strong was free, although the law had not been changed, but he only lived for five years as a free man, dying at 25 as a direct result of the severe beating he had received from Lisle.

Increasing involvement


The Strong case made a name for Sharp as the Defender of the Negro and he was approached by two more slaves, although in both cases (Hylas v Newton and R v Stapylton
Slavery at common law

Slavery at common law refers to the legal status of slavery and the slave trade under the system of law used in England and adopted by its former colonies....
) the results were unsatisfactory, and it became plain that the judiciary - and Lord Mansfield
William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield

William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield commonly known as Lord Mansfield Serjeant-at-law Privy Council of Great Britain was a British barrister, politician and judge....
, the Chief Justice of the King's Bench (the leading judge of the day) in particular - was trying very hard not to decide the issue. By this time, Great Britain was by far the largest trafficker in slaves, transporting more Africans acorss the Atlantic than all other nations put together, and the slave trade and slave labour were important to the British economy.

In 1769 Sharp published A Representation of the Injustice and Dangerous Tendency of Tolerating Slavery ..., the first tract in England attacking slavery.

James Somersett


On 13 January 1772, Sharp was visited and asked for help by James Somersett, a slave from Virginia
Virginia

The Commonwealth of Virginia is an United States U.S. state on the East Coast of the United States of the Southern United States. The state is known as the "Old Dominion" and sometimes as "Mother of Presidents", because it is the birthplace of Lists of United States Presidents by place of birth#By state....
 in America, who had come to England with his master Charles Stuart in 1769 and had run away in October 1771. After evading slave hunters employed by Stuart for 56 days, Somersett had been caught and put in the slave ship Ann and Mary, to be taken to Jamaica and sold. Three Londoners had applied to Lord Mansfield for a writ of habeas corpus
Habeas corpus

For the Living Things CD, see Habeas Corpus Habeas corpus is a legal action, or writ, through which a person can seek justice from the unlawful detention of him or herself, or of another person....
, which had been granted, with Somersett having to appear at a hearing on 24 January 1772. Members of the public responded to Somersett's plight by sending money to pay for his lawyers (who in the event all gave their services pro bono), while Stuart's costs were met by the West Indian planters and merchants.

Calling on his now-formidable knowledge of the law regarding individual liberty, Sharp briefed Somersett's lawyers. Mansfield's prevarications stretched the case
Somersett's Case

Somersett's Case is a famous judgement of the English Court of King's Bench in 1772 which held that slavery was unlawful in England . It is one of the most significant milestones in the campaign to abolish slavery throughout the world....
 over six hearings from January to May, and he finally delivered his judgment on 22 June 1772. It was a clear victory for Somersett, Sharp and the lawyers who acted for Somersett: Mansfield had acknowledge that English law did not allow slavery, and only a new Act of Parliament ("positive law") could bring it into legality. However, the verdict in the case is often misunderstood to mean the end of slavery in England. It was no such thing: it only dealt with the question of the forcible sending of someone overseas into bondage, that a slave becomes free the moment he sets foot on English territory. It was one of the most significant milestones in the campaign to abolish slavery throughout the world, more for its effect than for its actual legal weight.

The Zong


In 1781 the captain of a slave ship, the Zong
Zong Massacre

The Zong Massacre was the name given to the mass-killing of African slaves that took place in 1781 on the Zong, a British slave ship owned by James Gregson and colleagues in a Liverpool slave trade firm....
 decided to throw 122 sick slaves over board, with another ten throwing themselves over board in despair. He reasoned that as the slaves were cargo, the ship's owners would be entitled to the £30 a head compensation for their loss at sea: were he to land and the slaves to die there, no compensation would be forthcoming.

The ship's owners filed their insurance claim, but the insurers disputed it. In this first case the court found for the captain and the owners. The insurers appealed. It is at this point that Sharp enters the story. He was visited on 19 March 1783 by Olaudah Equiano
Olaudah Equiano

Olaudah Equiano , also known as Gustavus Vassa, was one of the most prominent people of African heritage involved in the British Empire debate for the abolition of the slave trade....
, a famous freed slave and later to be the author of a successful autobiography, and told of the horrific events aboard the Zong. Sharp immediately became involved in the court case, facing his old adversary over slave trade matters, Lord Mansfield. Mansfield notoriously declared that "the case was the same as if horses had been thrown overboard" but ruled that the ship-owners could not claim insurance on the slaves because the lack of sufficient water demonstrated that the cargo had been badly managed.

No officers or crew were charged or prosecuted for the deliberate killing of 132 slaves. Indeed, the Solicitor General, John Lee, declared that a master could drown slaves without "a surmise of impropriety". Sharp's attempts to mount a prosecution for murder never got off the ground.

The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade


Sharp was not completely alone at the beginning of the struggle: the Quakers, especially in America, were committed abolitionists. Sharp had a long and fruitful correspondence with Anthony Benezet
Anthony Benezet

Anthony Benezet, or Antoine B?n?zet , was an United States educator and abolitionist....
, a Quaker abolitionist in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania , often colloquially referred to as PA by natives and Northeasterners, is a U.S. state located in the Northeastern United States and Mid-Atlantic States regions of the United States....
. However, the Quakers were a marginal group in England, and were debarred from standing for Parliament, and they had no doubt as to who should be the chairman of the new society they were founding, The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade
Society for effecting the abolition of the slave trade

The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, , was a British abolitionism group, formed on 22 May 1787, when twelve men gathered together at a printing shop in London, United Kingdom....
. On 22 May 1787, at the inaugural meeting of the Committee - nine Quakers and three Anglicans (who strengthened the committee's likelihood of influencing Parliament) - Sharp's position was unanimously agreed. In the 20 years of the society's existence, during which Sharp was ever-present at Committee meetings, such was Sharp's modesty that he would never take the chair, always contriving to arrive just after the meeting had started to avoid any chance of having to take the meeting. While the committee felt it sensible to concentrate on the slave trade, Sharp felt strongly that the target should be slavery itself. On this he was out-voted, but he worked tirelessly for the Society nevertheless.

Abolition

When Sharp heard that the Act of Abolition had at last been passed by both Houses of Parliament and given Royal Assent on 25 March, 1807, he fell to his knees and offered a prayer of thanksgiving. He was now 71, and had outlived almost all of the allies and opponents of his early campaigns. He was regarded as the grand old man of the abolition struggle, and although a driving force in its early days, his place had later been taken by others such as Thomas Clarkson
Thomas Clarkson

Thomas Clarkson , abolitionism, was born at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England, and became a leading campaigner against the Atlantic slave trade in the British Empire....
, William Wilberforce
William Wilberforce

William Wilberforce was a United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland politician, a philanthropist and a leader of the movement to abolish the Atlantic slave trade....
 and the Clapham Sect
Clapham Sect

The Clapham Sect was an influential group of like-minded Church of England social reformers in England at the beginning of the nineteenth century ....
.

The Province of Freedom


Although no reliable figures exist, it is thought that in the early 1780s there were around 15,000 black people in Britain, most of them without employment. Ideas were formulated for a settlement in Africa where they could return "home". Henry Smeathman, a plant collector who had visited Sierra Leone, propounded to the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor
Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor

The Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor was a charitable organization founded in London in 1786 to provide sustenance for distressed people of African and Asian origin....
 that the country would be an excellent location. Worried black people came to see Sharp, concerned that they might be re-enslaved in such a place.

Sharp took to the idea with alacrity: he saw it as a perfect opportunity to create a new model society from scratch. He drew up plans and regulations, and persuaded the Treasury to finance the ships and pay £12 a head to each embarking settler. He named the new, egalitarian, peaceful Christian society-to-be "The Province of Freedom
Cline Town, Sierra Leone

Cline Town, Sierra Leone, which used to be known as Granville Town, was established in 1787 by the London-based Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor....
".

The utopian ideal quickly went sour. Fire broke out before the ships had left London; 411 sailed for Africa, including some 60 white prostitutes who had been married off to the male settlers hastily (and certainly without Sharp's knowledge). The settlers arrived in May 1787, at the onset of the five month rainy season, and a settlement of sorts was built, named Granville Town. The commander of the naval escort that had brought the settlers concluded that they were unfit for the complex challenge of founding a new settlement in a hostile environment. One of the settlers whom Granville had rescued from a slave ship left the settlement to work in the slave trade, much to Sharp's despair. By the end of 1788 Sharp had poured £1,735 18s 8d of his own money into the settlement. In 1789 Granville Town was burned to the ground by a disgruntled local chief.

Through The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, in 1790 Granville came into contact with Thomas Peters
Thomas Peters (black leader)

Thomas Peters, or Thomas Potters in the Book of Negroes , was one of four African American Founding Fathers of Freetown, Sierra Leone. Peters, alongside David George, Moses Wilkinson, Cato Perkins and Joseph Leonard, was among the five most influential blacks who recruited African Americans in Nova Scotia for the Sierra Leone venture....
, a former American slave who fought with the British during revolution in return for freedom. Sharp was instrumental in helping Peters to establish Freetown
Freetown

Freetown is the Capital and largest city of Sierra Leone. It is a major port city on the Atlantic Ocean located in the Western Area of Sierra Leone and with a population of 1,070,200 ....
, Sierra Leone. Sharp is considered to be one of the founders of Sierra Leone alongside Thomas Peters and the Clarkson brothers (Thomas Clarkson
Thomas Clarkson

Thomas Clarkson , abolitionism, was born at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England, and became a leading campaigner against the Atlantic slave trade in the British Empire....
 and John Clarkson
John Clarkson

John Gibson Clarkson was a right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball from 1882-1894. Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Clarkson played for the Worcester Ruby Legs , Chicago Cubs , Atlanta Braves , and Cleveland Spiders ....
).

Other activism


, made on 2 April 1809.]]

Sharp ardently sympathized with the revolt of the American colonists
American Revolution

The American Revolution refers to the political upheaval during the last half of the 18th century in which the Thirteen Colonies of North America overthrew the governance of the British Empire and then rejected the British monarchy to become the sovereign United States of America....
. He believed in peace in America, but he also believed they were entitled to "Equitable Representation", an idea repeated in the famous phrase "No Taxation without Representation". When he realised his job in the Ordnance Office meant sending equipment to British forces fighting the colonists, he took leave of absence. As the war continued, he wrote to his employers "I cannot return to my ordnance duty whilst a bloody war is carried on, unjustly, against my fellow-subjects." Eventually in 1776 he resigned, never to have paid employment again and supported willingly by his brothers, who were happy to see him dedicate his time to his various causes.

Sharp also advocated parliamentary reform and the legislative independence of Ireland
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
, and agitated against the impressment
Impressment

Impressment is the act of compelling people to serve in the military, usually by force and without notice. Unlike "shanghaiing", impressment is carried out by law, or under color #Color of law, and forces the impressed person into military rather than commercial sea service....
 of sailors for the Navy
Royal Navy

The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom is the oldest of the British Armed Forces . From the mid-18th century until well into the 20th century, it was the most powerful navy in the world, playing a key part in establishing the British Empire as the dominant world power from 1815 until the early 1940s....
. It was through his efforts that bishops for the United States of America
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 were consecrated by the Archbishop of Canterbury
Archbishop of Canterbury

The Archbishop of Canterbury is the chief bishop and principal leader of the Church of England, the symbolic head of the worldwide Anglican Communion and the Diocesan Bishop of the Diocese of Canterbury, the Episcopal see that churches must be in communion with in order to be a part of the Anglican Communion....
 in 1787. He also argued for the reform of Parliament based on Magna Carta
Magna Carta

Magna Carta , also called Magna Carta Libertatum , is an Kingdom of England legal charter, originally issued in the year 1215. It was written in Latin....
 and to back this up he devised the doctrine of accumulative authority. This doctrine stated that because almost innumerable parliaments had approved Magna Carta it would take the same number of Parliaments to repeal it. Like many others, Sharp accepted the supremacy of Parliament as an institution, but did not believe that this power was without restraint, and thought that Parliament could not repeal Magna Carta.

Sharp was also one of the founders of the British and Foreign Bible Society
British and Foreign Bible Society

The British and Foreign Bible Society, often known in England and Wales as simply as the Bible Society, is a non-denominational Christian Charitable organization that exists to make the Bible available throughout the world....
 and of the Society for the Conversion of the Jews.

Classical grammarian

One of Granville's letters written in 1778 (published in 1798), propounded what has come to be known as The Granville Sharp Rule (in actuality only the first of six principles involving the article that Sharp articulated):

“When the copulative kai connects two noun
Noun

In linguistics, a noun is a member of a large, open class lexical category whose members can occur as the main word in the subject of a clause, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition....
s of the same case, if the article ho, or any of its cases, precedes the first of the said nouns or participles, and is not repeated before the second noun or participle, the latter always relates to the same person that is expressed or described by the first noun or participle ...”


This rule, if true, has a profound bearing on Unitarian doctrine, which led to a ‘celebrated controversy’, in which many leading divines took part, including Christopher Wordsworth
Christopher Wordsworth

Christopher Wordsworth was an England bishop and man of letters....
.

Daniel B. Wallace says about Sharp:

“His strong belief in Christ’s deity led him to study the Scriptures in the original in order to defend more ably that precious truth ... As he studied the Scriptures in the original, he noticed a certain pattern, namely, when the construction article-noun-?a?-noun involved personal nouns which were singular and not proper names, they always referred to the same person. He noticed further that this rule applied in several texts to the deity of Jesus Christ.”


But Wallace claims that this rule is often too broadly applied. “Sharp’s rule Number 1” does not always work with plural forms of personal titles. Instead, a phrase that follows the form article-noun-“and”-noun, when the nouns involved are plurals, can involve two entirely distinct groups, two overlapping groups, two groups of which is one a subset of the other, or two identical groups. In other words, the rule is of very specific and limited application.

Of Granville Sharp's most successful critic, Calvin Winstanley, Wallace says:

"Winstanley conceded 'There are, you say, no exceptions, in the New Testament, to your rule; that is, I suppose, unless these particular texts [i.e. the ones Sharp used to adduce Christ's deity] be such ... it is nothing surprising to find all these particular texts in question appearing as the exceptions to your rule, and the sole exceptions ... in the New Testament' - an obvious concession that he could find no exceptions save for the ones he supposed exist in the christologically pregnant texts."


What Wallace neglects by use of ellipses (...) is the flow of Winstanley's argument as well as the character of his theology. Winstanley's quote argued that one could not apply Sharp's rule to the possible exceptions unless it could be shown that extra-biblical literature also followed Sharp's rule. Through multiple examples Winstanley showed that in classical Greek and in patristic Greek - all the literature surrounding the New Testament, the rule simply did not apply consistently. Wallace's quote comes from the end of Winstanley's argument in which he clearly is not conceding the point. To complete Winstanley's argument:

"There are, you say, no exceptions, in the New Testament, to your rule; that is, I suppose, unless these particular texts be such; which you think utterly improbable. You would argue, then, that if these texts were exceptions, there would be more. I do not perceive any great weight in this hypothetical reasoning. But, however plausible it may appear, the reply is at hand. There are no other words so likely to yield exceptions; because there are no other words, between which the insertion of the copulative, would effect so remarkable a deviation from the established form of constructing them to express one person; and of course, would so pointedly suggest a difference of signification."


Winstanley was a trinitarian Christian, but cautioned that a rule that held true only in the New Testament in all but the disputed cases was too flimsy a ground on which to try to prove the divinity of Christ to the Socinians (Unitarians). Instead he said, "[I think] there are much more cogent arguments in reserve, when [Sharp's] rule of interpretation shall be abandoned." His biggest criticisms of Sharp's rule rest in the fact that 1) the early church fathers do not follow it and 2) the early church father's never invoked this rule to prove the divinity of Christ (though it would have been an obvious tool against such heresy). He concludes, "Hence it may be presumed that the doctrine then rested on other grounds."

While it is affirmed by Wallace and other Biblical scholars that there is more and more confirmation of this rule, there are trinitarian scholars who continue to believe Winstanley's refutation sufficient.

Publications

Notable publications are in bold.
  • 1765 An Answer to the Rev. Dr. Kennicot's Charge of Corruptions in the Hebrew Texts of Ezra and Nehemiah
  • 1767 A Short Introduction to Vocal Musick
  • 1767 On the Pronunciation of the English Tongue
  • 1768 Remarks on Several Important Prophecies ...
  • 1769 A Representation of the Injustice and Dangerous Tendency of Tolerating Slavery ..., the first tract in England attacking slavery
  • 1771 An Appendix to the Representation, reinforcing his case against slavery
  • 1771 Remarks Concerning Encroachments on the River Thames
  • 1773 Remarks ... against Duelling
  • 1774 A Declaration of the People's Natural Right to a Share in the Legislature, in support of the American colonists
  • 1775 A Declaration of the People's Natural Right ..., in support of both Americans and Irish
  • 1776 The Law of Retribution
  • 1776 The Just Limitation of Slavery in the Laws of God
  • 1776 The Laws of Passive Obedience
  • 1776 The Laws of Liberty
  • 1777 preface to General James Oglethorpe
    James Oglethorpe

    James Oglethorpe was a Kingdom of Great Britain general, a philanthropist, and was the founder of the colony of Georgia . He was born in London, the son of Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe of Westbrook Place, Godalming in the county of Surrey....
    's
    The Sailor's Advocate, an attack on press gang
    Press Gang

    Press Gang is a United Kingdom children's television comedy-drama consisting of forty-three episodes across five series that were broadcast from 1989 to 1993....
    s
  • 1777 The Laws of Nature
  • 1777 The Case of Saul
  • 1778 An Address to the People of England ... stating the Illegality of impressing Seamen
  • 1779 The Doctrine of 'Nullum Tempus occurrit Regi' Explained ...
  • 1780 seven tracts on The Legal Means of Political Reformation
  • 1781 seven tracts on Free Militia
  • 1784 Congragational Courts and the ancient English Constitution of Frankpledge
  • 1784 A Tract on the Election of Bishops
  • 1786 An English Alphabet for the Use of Foreigners
  • 1786 Regulations for a New Settlement of Sierra Leone
  • 1790 Free English Territory in Africa
  • 1790 Plan of a Public Charity
  • 1791 A Letter ... (on) the State of the London Workhouse
  • 1792 Causes des Calamités publiques qui régnent à présent par toute l'Étendue de L'Empire Romain
  • 1792 A Collection of Political Papers, with Remarks on the Accomplishment of Prophecies
  • 1793 A Letter to a Gentleman in Maryland respecting the extreme Wickedness of tolerating the Slave Trade ...
  • 1794 A General plan for laying out Towns and Townships in new-acquired Lands ...
  • 1798 Remarks on the Uses of the Definitive Article in the Greek Text of the New Testament, Containing Many New Proofs of the Divinity of Christ, from Passages Which Are Wrongly Translated in the Common English Version, which contains the grammatical principle still known as "Sharp's Rule"
  • 1801 The Child's First Book improved, with a Preface addressed to Mothers and Teachers
  • 1801 An Answer to an anonymous Letter on Pre-Destination and Free-will, with a Postscript on Eternal Punishments
  • 1801 Extract of a Letter on Land-Carriages, Roads, and profitable Labour of Oxen
  • 1804 three tracts on The Syntax and Pronunciation of the Hebrew Tongue
  • 1805 An Inquiry whether the Description of Babylon ... agrees perfectly with Rome, as a City etc ...
  • 1805 A Letter ... respecting the proposed Catholic Emancipation
  • 1805 Serious Reflections on the Slave Trade and Slavery Addressed to the Peers of Great Britain
  • 1806 A Dissertation on the supreme Divine Dignity of the Messiah
  • 1806 Remarks on the two last Petitions in the Lord's Prayer ...
  • 1807 The System of Colonial Law compared with the eternal Laws of God, and with the Indispensable Principles of the British Constitution
  • 1807 A Letter in Answer to some of the leading Principles and Doctrines of the People called Quakers
  • 1807 The Case of Saul, to which is added a short tract wherein the Influence of Demons is further illustrated
  • 1808 Jerusalem ... respecting the Etymology of that Word
  • 1810 Melchisedec; or an Answer to a Question respecting the Reality of Melchisedec's Existence, as King of Salem and priest of the Most High God
  • 1811 Modus Decimandi
  • 1812 Remarks on an important Passage, Matt. xxi. 18, which has long been perverted by the Church of Rome in Support of her vain Pretensions to supreme Dominion over all other Episcopal Churches


Legacy


Sharp's portrait was made many times, both during his life and afterwards. The National Portrait Gallery, London holds seven portraits, including the large oil of
The Sharp Family by Johann Zoffany
Johann Zoffany

Johann Zoffany, Zoffani or Zauffelij was a German Neoclassicism painter, active mainly in England. His works appear in many prominent British national galleries such as the National Gallery, London and the Tate Gallery....
 and six pencil drawings, etchings and engravings. An oil portrait of Sharp by Mather Brown
Mather Brown

Mather Brown was a portrait and historical painter, born in Boston, Massachusetts but active in England.Brown was the son of Gawen and Elizabeth Brown, and descended from the Rev....
 is in a private collection.

As well as Granville Town in Sierra Leone, the free village
Free Villages

Free Villages is the term used for Caribbean settlements, particularly in Jamaica, founded in the 1830s and 1840s independent of the control of plantation owners and other major estates....
 of Granville in Jamaica
Jamaica

Jamaica is an island nation of the Greater Antilles, in length and as much as in width situated in the Caribbean Sea. It is about south of Cuba, and west of the island of Hispaniola, on which Haiti and the Dominican Republic are situated....
 was named after Sharp.

A memorial to Sharp was erected in Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey

The Collegiate Church of St Peter at Westminster, which is almost always referred to popularly and informally as Westminster Abbey, is a large, mainly Gothic architecture Church , in Westminster, London, just to the west of the Palace of Westminster....
, and he features in carved bas-relief on the side of the Clarkson Memorial
Clarkson Memorial

The Clarkson Memorial, located in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England, is a memorial to Thomas Clarkson , a central figure in the campaign against the Atlantic slave trade in the British empire....
, a memorial to fellow-abolitionist Thomas Clarkson
Thomas Clarkson

Thomas Clarkson , abolitionism, was born at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England, and became a leading campaigner against the Atlantic slave trade in the British Empire....
 (1760 – 1846).

In 2007 the Royal Mail issued a set of stamps to commemorate the two hundreth anniversary of the abolition of slavery in the United Kingdom. Sharp featured on the 50p stamp.

In 2007 Sharp's tomb in the graveyard of All Saint's Church, Fulham was also restored to coincide with the anniversary. In recognition of Sharp's historical importance and preparation for the anniversary, the tomb was listed
Listed building

A listed building in the United Kingdom is a building or other structure officially designated as being of special architectural, historical or cultural significance....
 as Grade II on 16 March 2007, only three months after the application was made to English Heritage
English Heritage

English Heritage is a non-departmental public body of the United Kingdom government with a broad remit of managing the historic built environment of England....
 and the Department of Culture, Media and Sport. The tomb was restored in June 2007 and a ceremony to mark the completion of the work was held in the church, attended by many notable figures including Professor Simon Schama
Simon Schama

Simon Michael Schama, Order of the British Empire is a British professor of history and art history at Columbia University. His many works on history and art include Landscape and Memory, Dead Certainties, Rembrandt's Eyes, and his history of the French Revolution, Citizens ....
. Speaking at the service, Schama said that "Sharp's great contribution was to 'lower the threshold of shame' in society."

Granville Sharp's papers are deposited at the Gloucestershire Archives, reference D3549. There is also a substantial collection of his letters at York Minster
York Minster

York Minster is a Gothic architecture cathedral in York, England and is one of the largest of its kind in Northern Europe alongside Cologne Cathedral....
 Library.

External links

  • *