answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The slave trade wasn't stopped by one person single-handed, it was a colaboration of reasons.

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Which person stopped the slave trade?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Where was the stop of the slave trade?

Who stopped the slave tradethe slave trade sropped in America. And then abollished in England and Pakistan. I think


Who stoped slave trade?

The slave trade has not been stopped - there are still slaves in parts of the modern world.


Who is the American president stopped slave trade?

bic boi


When was the slave trade stopped?

your mama nah just kidding 1865


What job did William wilberforce do?

He was a British polititian and he stopped the slave trade


Who stop slave trade in Nigeria?

the abolition of slave trade in Nigeria was masterminded by the missionaries and liberated slaves who returned from sierra-leone By Mr. CLem Mordi C.


What is definition of slave trade?

the buisness of buying and selling people for profit


What could the world be like if slave trade was stopped?

Slave trading has been over since the late 1800's.


Did Martin Luther King stop slave trade?

He didn't really abolish the slave trade as it was stopped in Nelson Mandala's year. but the Slave trade was partly stopped by him.I think you two are mixing up Civil Rights and Apartheid with slavery William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson had a lot to do with the abolition of slaveryhe didn't completely stop the slave trade he made it much easyer for black people to walk around and not get treated badly


What single invention abruptly stopped any possible downward trend in the slave trade?

That was mainly the cotton gin


Kind of trade that could not be prohibited before 1808?

slave trade


What were the negative side of slave trade?

The negative impacts of the slave trade include the dehumanization of enslaved individuals, the destruction of families and communities, the perpetuation of racial prejudice and discrimination, and the long-lasting socio-economic disparities that continue to affect descendants of enslaved individuals.