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'''As you were researching this book, what surprised you the most?'''
[[File:William_Lloyd_Garrison_by_Southworth_and_Hawes,_c1850.png|thumbnail|200px|William Lloyd Garrison advocate for free trade and the abolition of slavery]]
The most surprising discovery was the close relationship between Victorian free trade ideology and transatlantic abolitionism. This led me to answering a question I hadn’t thought to ask: What happened to US abolitionists once American slavery was abolished?
The most surprising discovery was the close relationship between Victorian free trade ideology and transatlantic abolitionism. This led me to answering a question I hadn’t thought to ask: What happened to US abolitionists once American slavery was abolished?
[[File:William_Lloyd_Garrison_by_Southworth_and_Hawes,_c1850.png|thumbnail|175px|William Lloyd Garrison advocate for free trade and the abolition of slavery]]
Nowadays, historians and political scientists tend to associate American free trade ideology with Jeffersonianism, which became tied to a defense of Southern slavery by the time of the American Civil War. However, what I’ve found is that a number of America’s leading abolitionists—among them, William Lloyd Garrison, Henry Ward Beecher, Joshua Leavitt, Ralph Waldo Emerson—were subscribers to a very different strand of free trade ideology: the Victorian ideology then famously known as Cobdenism, named after Victorian England’s apostle of free trade, Richard Cobden. He and his transatlantic disciples believed that free trade and non-interventionism in foreign affairs would lead to domestic prosperity and world peace.

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