Politics, Diplomacy & War

William Wilberforce is the towering political character of the period. MP for Hull from 1780 to 1784 and of York thereafter, he dedicated his life to the campaigns to abolish the slave trade and slavery itself. Later on, another Hull-born MP Thomas Perronet Thompson would campaign against the Corn Laws, a tariff that kept the prices of imported grain high enough to cause hardship.

East Riding born diplomat George Hammond’s duties took him far from this area, but also make him one of the more interesting people to come out of the county. The aftermath of the American Revolution gave transatlantic relations many new challenges, and Hammond served as one of the first British envoys to the United States.

War did not come directly to East Yorkshire in the Georgian era, but its effects were certainly felt. Billeting of soldiers during the wars of the Austrian Succession, the American Revolution, and the Napoleonic wars took their toll on local business people. Of course, many of the region’s people served in the forces abroad, and the Stovin brothers of Whitgift distinguished themselves in the American Revolution at the War of 1812 and the Napoleonic Wars in Europe.