
audiobook
by Sociedad Abolicionista Española
LA EXPERIENCIA ABOLICIONISTA DE PUERTO-RICO
EXCELENTÍSIMO SEÑOR MINISTRO DE ULTRAMAR
AL EXCMO. SR. MINISTRO DE ULTRAMAR
I. PROVINCIA DE PUERTO-RICO
II. PROVINCIA DE PUERTO-RICO
This work presents a vivid snapshot of the Spanish abolitionist movement’s struggle to enforce the 1873 law ending slavery in Puerto Rico. Written as a formal appeal to the Minister of Overseas Affairs, it details the Society’s painstaking research—citing official reports, foreign consular observations, and contemporary newspaper commentary—to argue that the newly issued regulations contradict the spirit and letter of the emancipation legislation.
The authors lay out three key grievances: the failure to honor compensation clauses for former slave owners, the neglect of stipulated timelines, and the broader disconnect between the governor’s decree and the law’s intended outcomes. Their plea combines legal reasoning with moral urgency, urging the government to revise the August 1874 regulations and fully implement the March law. Listeners will hear the tension between bureaucratic inertia and the hopeful drive of activists seeking true freedom for the island’s enslaved population.
Language
es
Duration
~2 hours (133K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Carlos Colon and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)
Release date
2013-08-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A pioneering anti-slavery society in 19th-century Spain, this organization brought together liberal and reform-minded voices to press for the end of slavery in Cuba and Puerto Rico. Its publications capture a key chapter in the long political and moral struggle over abolition in the Spanish world.
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