Thomas Moody | |
Office: |
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Birth Date: | 1779 |
Birth Place: | Arthuret, Cumbria |
Death Place: | Berrywood House, Hampshire |
Nationality: | British |
Spouse: | Martha Clement |
Children: | 10 including: |
Relations: | Richard Stanley Hawks Moody (grandson); Richard Clement (cousin); Reynold Clement (cousin) |
Residence: | 7 Alfred Place, Bedford Square
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Alma Mater: | University of Oxford |
Occupation: | Colonial Office geopolitical expert (1806 – 1849); Director of the British Royal Gunpowder Manufactory (1832 – 1849) |
Committees: | British Parliamentary Commission on West Indian Slavery (1821 – 1828); Inspector of British Gunpowder (1840 – 1849) |
Parents: | Thomas Moody (b. 1732) Barbara Blamire |
Allegiance: | United Kingdom |
Branch: | Royal Engineers |
Rank: | Colonel |
Serviceyears: | 1797 – 1849 |
Commands: | Royal Engineers in West Indies (1829 - 1837) |
Battles: | |
Awards: | Knight of the Order of Military Merit of France (1820) Justice of the Peace (1826) DCL (Oxon) |
Colonel Thomas Moody (1779–1849) was a British geopolitical expert to the Colonial Office; Commander of the Royal Engineers; Home Secretary for Foreign Parliamentary Commissioners; Director of the British Royal Gunpowder Manufactory; and Director of the New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Land Company.
Moody was knighted by France, by Louis XVIII, in the Order of Military Merit, for his service during the Napoleonic Wars. Moody and his friend Sir James Stirling offered in 1828 to colonise Australia using their own capital, but were prohibited from doing so by the British Government.
Moody was the father of Major-General Richard Clement Moody, the founder of British Columbia and first British Governor of the Falkland Islands, and Colonel Hampden Clement Blamire Moody CB, the Commander of the Royal Engineers in China during the Taiping Rebellion and Second Opium War.
Thomas Moody was born in Arthuret, Longtown, Cumbria,[1] into a family with a history of service to the British Empire. He was the third son of Thomas Moody (1732 – 1796)[2] [3] by Barbara Blamire (1740 – 1806)[4] of Cumberland. His mother was a cousin of William Blamire MP High Sheriff of Cumberland and of the poet Susanna Blamire.[4] His eldest brother Charles was a merchant in the West Indies: and his other brother George, of Longtown, was a surgeon whose daughter Jane married Lewis Alexander of Hopwood Hall, Halifax, West Yorkshire,[5] who was the father of the barrister Robert Alexander FRS FSA.[6] [7]
Moody was extensively read in geopolitics, history, climatology, economics, philosophy, and physics,[1] and was interested in discipline and surveillance, and was fluent in English, French, and Dutch. His reading included the works of Montesquieu; William Petty; William Robertson; Charles-Augustin de Coulomb (whom he knew personally);Johannes van den Bosch; and those of the Africans Toussaint Louverture and Henri Christophe, and was extensively read in abolitionist literature. He was influenced by the contemporary African Jean-Pierre Boyer who was the President of Haiti.
Moody was described by Stapleton Cotton, 1st Viscount Combermere, to whom he served as aide-de-camp from 1817 to 1820, as 'a very intelligent person':[8] and by 20th century historian D. J. Murray as 'an expert on West Indian affairs in general'[8] who 'helped to provide an understanding in the [Colonial] Office of problems the existence of which was barely comprehended, [and] raised fundamental questions and explained the wider implications of the Government's course of action':[8] and by Sir Humphrey Fleming Senhouse as 'an officer of high character and reputation'. Moody was employed by the Duke of Wellington to advise on the defence of the West Indies.[9] Moody had 'all [the London establishment]'s archives open to him'[10] and was 'almost an obvious choice'[1] to be 'Home Secretary for Foreign Parliamentary Commissioners'.[8]
Moody was a Director of the Crown Life Assurance Company,[11] of 33 Bridge Street, Blackfriars, City of London;[12] and a Director of the New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Land Company, of 5 Copthall Court, City of London. Moody was a member of London's Political Economy Club, at which he disputed the economics of James Mill, of John Ramsay McCulloch, and of Adam Smith, and admired the philosophy of Jean-Baptiste Say. He invited the Whig chess champion Alexander McDonnell, whom he thought to be 'unquestionably clever' and to have a 'cool and reasoning manner', to Downing Street to discuss economics.[13] Moody's other friends included Sir Robert Wilmot Horton (with whom he had an extensive correspondence, and after whom he named one of his sons); Shute Barrington, Bishop of Durham (after whom he named another of his sons);[14] Sir James Leith (after whom he named another of his sons); Sir Humphrey Fleming Senhouse; Charles-Augustin de Coulomb; Sir James Stirling (with whom Moody offered in 1828 to colonise Australia using their own capital); the botanist James Mangles FRS (whom Moody advised about the Swan River Colony);[15] Thomas Hyde Villiers; and the geographer James Macqueen[10] (whom Moody contended to be 'a most unmanageable person').[16]
Moody arrived in Barbados in 1797, to be mathematics master,[17] writing master, and Assistant Headmaster,[18] of the Anglican Codrington College, at which he served until 1805.[19] [8] [1] Moody there demonstrated such aptitude for mathematics that Lord Seaforth, who was the British General in Barbados, granted Moody his patronage, and procured for Moody a commission in the Royal Engineers,[20] which Moody entered as a Lieutenant on 1 July 1806.[17] Moody's first duty was to administer the Office of Ordinance in Demerara,[17] after which he was promoted to the Government Secretaryships of Demerara and Berbice, as which he served for three years.[8] [20] Moody was promoted to Second Captain on 1 May 1811; to Captain on 20 December 1814; and to Brevet Major on 23 May 1816. He was put on half-pay by the Army, in 1815, after the cessation of the Napoleonic Wars, after which[20] he worked for one year in Guiana as an attorney for the Bohemian Jew Wolfert Katz, who was its wealthiest planter.[17]
Moody served as aide-de-camp to Sir James Leith,[20] [21] who was Governor of Barbados from May 1815 to October 1816,[21] [8] [1] and as Superintendent of the Crown Plantations in Guadeloupe.[17] [8] Moody named his son James Leith Moody after Leith, of whom he was an admirer. Thomas was involved in the successful Invasion of Guadeloupe (1815), for which he was subsequently knighted, in 1820, by Louis XVIII, in the Order of Military Merit. He was permitted by George IV to wear the Cross of the Order whilst in Britain, but not to use the title 'Sir'.[22] [23] Moody received the rank of Major in the British Army for his services in conflicts in the West Indies.[23] Moody also served as aide-de-camp to both the President of Tortola; and to Stapleton Cotton, 1st Viscount Combermere,[8] who was Governor of Barbados from 1817 to 1820,[8] after whom Moody named one of his sons.[24] [25] [20] Moody was described by Stapleton Cotton, 1st Viscount Combermere in a letter from the same to Sir Robert Wilmot Horton that be dated 15 December 1821, as '[a] very intelligent person, and having been employed in various situations, these gave him opportunities of acquiring a thorough knowledge of the local details, etc. of those islands and Colonies [the West Indies], and a great deal of useful information may be collected from him'.[8] In 1816, Moody was responsible for the transfer of Africans, whom the Royal Navy had rescued from slave-ships since the abolition of the slave-trade,[1] to the Crown estates in Guadeloupe, where they were to be employed as apprentices.[1] Moody knew that the rescued Africans made an 'extremely useful' contribution to the British Empire.[17] He consequently was appointed as a Parliamentary Commissioner[17] and then as the 'Home Secretary for Foreign Parliamentary Commissioners'.[8]
Moody witnessed and supported the slave-rebellions of September and October 1816[26] that he described as an attempt 'by the mass of the slaves... to gain independence'.[27] Thomas by 1816 owned estates in Barbados, in The Guianas, in Demerara, in Berbice, and in Tortola.[27] [17] [1] He was a claimant on estates in Berbice in 1827 (The Times of London, 4 April 1827, p. 4)[28] and was awarded compensation for an enslaved person in British Guiana.
In 1821, William Wilberforce proposed to the House of Commons that the Colonial Office[1] create a Commission to investigate reports that the Slave Trade Act 1807 was violated by owners who had untruly redesignated their slaves as 'apprentices'.[29] [30] There were to be two commissioners who were to report to Lord Bathurst, Secretary of State for War and the Colonies. Moody and John Dougan (1765 - 1826) volunteered for the commissionerships and were selected by Bathurst.[17] [8] [1] In April 1824, Moody received the official title of 'Home Secretary for Foreign Parliamentary Commissioners'.[8] Moody believed that this title were inaccurate: he wrote in a letter to Robert Hay, of 14 July 1828, 'my real duties have been more connected with the West India Department, the Colonial Finance Accounts, and the correspondence and details relative to emigration'.[8]
Sir Robert Wilmot Horton, Undersecretary of State for the Colonies, wrote to Moody, 'I do not know any man more competent (if so competent) to direct the application of labour as yourself'.[8] Moody had improved the efficacy of the Colonial Office in London:[8] he had improved the efficacy of the annual Blue Books,[8] which had been introduced in 1821,[31] and introduced, as his own invention, new Brown Books in which further statistical information from every colony was entered every six months for the London Colonial Office.[8] The subjects of the analyses by Moody for the Colonial Office included: 'The duties and means of increasing the utility of naval officers in the West Indies'; the history of the Crown Estates of Berbice; and the conditions of labour on the sugar-plantations of the West Indies'.[8] Moody also wrote the 1825 Considerations in Defence of the Orders in Council for the Melioration of Slavery in Trinidad:[8] a copy of which is in the library of the Royal Commonwealth Society.[8] Historian D. J. Murray provides a synopsis of Moody's contribution to the Colonial Office: 'He [Moody] helped to provide an understanding in the Office of problems the existence of which was barely comprehended, [and] he raised fundamental questions and explained the wider implications of the Government's course of action'.[8] Moody considered his objective to be the identification of factual evidence that would enable Lord Bathurst and Wilmot Horton to make accurate decisions: and Moody was contemptuous of the inclusion of unproven assertions in political discourse:[8] Moody wrote, on 3 July 1826, 'It is of infinitely great importance for Lord Bathurst to have laid before him clear statements of facts rather than mere opinions... It is so much easier to give an opinion than to describe carefully and accurately a tedious series of facts. It is, however, from these facts only that Lord Bathurst can form his own principles practically to guide his judgment'.[8] Moody's contention that only factual evidence could be a valid determiner of practice was taught to his protégé James Stephen.[32]
Dougan (who was the uncle of Moody's wife Martha Clement[17] [1]) was the son of an owner of sugar-plantations on Demerara:[1] and stated, 'all my nearest relations and friends were either Planters or Owners of slaves'.[17] Dougan had worked as a privateer and as a Prize Agent for the Royal Navy on Tortola.[1] [17] Dougan was influenced by the evangelical Whigs such as the Quaker John Barton,[29] [33] [34] and by the Clapham Sect. Moody was influenced by Montesquieu, William Petty, William Robertson, Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, Johannes van den Bosch, and by the Africans Toussaint Louverture, Henri Christophe, and Jean-Pierre Boyer who was the President of Haiti.[17] Moody's protégé's Stephen's recommendation, in 1802, of indenture created the basis for both the Act for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, and for the Orders in Council.
Moody and Dougan arrived on Tortola in May 1822[17] despite that Moody objected to the stipulated interview process in which masters and apprentices were to be interviewed together: because Moody thought that that practice were 'calculated to excite complaints of the servant against the master'.[17] [1] The slaveowners interviewed by Moody included Abraham Mendes Belisario, who was the Deputy Provost Marshal of Tortola, who owned 17 slaves.[17] Moody insisted that the unreliable 'Character' reports that were provided by the masters ought not to be included in the Commission's report: and that rather he and Dougan ought to specify their assessment of the masters.[17] The Commissioners recorded that African apprentices were employed by free black Africans.[17] When apprentices employed by Hugh C. Maclean, who was Comptroller of the Customs on Tortola, stole livestock, Maclean had them beaten. Dougan objected to Moody's refusal to criticise Maclean: but did not receive any sympathy from the government of the islands. Dougan replied that Moody was an agent 'not of His Majesty's government, but of the colonial assemblies';[1] and complained of the 'state of Irritation and Disunion of the Commission';[17] [1] and asserted that as a consequence of '[the] repeated attacks, [and] the State of Irritation of Major Moody's Mind... all hopes of Conciliation [were] ended'.[30] [17] Moody replied that Dougan '[had] for some time past obviously been affected by a termination of blood to his head'[1] and their 'protracted and unpleasant dispute' was inherited by Dougan's daughter Mary Dougan[30] [17] after the death in penury of Dougan in 1826.[1]
John Dougan resigned from the Commission[17] in June 1822[1] and returned to England to submit to the House of Commons his report, which is dated 20 December 1823, in which he contends that 'free labour in the West Indies is preferable to compulsory labour'.[29] [1] Sir Robert Wilmot Horton (who had by 1824 written, with Charles Ellis, 1st Baron Seaford, an anti-abolitionist article for John Murray's[35] Quarterly Review[1] for which John Taylor Coleridge wrote anti-abolitionist articles)[36] [37] forwarded in 1824 one of Moody's papers to George Canning, who was then Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,[38] Moody, who had returned to London by 9 January 1824,[1] in 1825 presented to the House of Commons the official Commission report, with an exposition of the reasons for his refusal to sign Dougan's report.[17] Moody's first report, which is dated 2 March 1825 and consists of over 200 pages,[17] contends that 'without some species of coercion African labour would be worthless'.[17] [39] Thomas Babington Macaulay described Moody's report as 'in substance, a defence of West Indian slavery' but Macaulay's description is inaccurate because Moody did not desire the Africans' employment as slaves, but as apprentices.[1] Moody described his anti-slavery theory as a 'Philosophy of Labour',[40] and himself as a 'practical philanthropist'.[17] Moody, who was extensively read in abolitionist literature, contended that it were a 'physical fact' that only blacks could perform in the 'torrid zone'.[17] [1] Moody's conclusion was that the Africans in the West Indies should be taken back to Africa.[17]
Moody submitted his second report, also of over 200 pages, in 1826.[17] Moody analysed agricultural colonies in the Netherlands, the Bengal peasantry, slavery in India, prostitution in Sierra Leone during the African Institution, slavery in the United States, and the American Colonization Society for African-American settlement in West Africa. Moody also studied the agriculture and the commerce of Egypt, the commerce of Carthage, and the religions of Abyssinia.[1] Moody's contentions were endorsed by the director of the Commission, Lord Bathurst; and by the same's Under-Secretary, Sir Robert Wilmot Horton;[17] and by the British Parliament, which stated Moody's ‘great experience in the control of labour, both slave and free, both African and European, in garrison, and in the field’.[41] [42] Moody's reports provoked ire of the evangelical Whig abolitionists,[17] [42] who desired a 'free black peasantry' rather than equality for Africans.[1] Zachary Macaulay in the Anti-Slavery Reporter censured Moody's contentions;[17] [28] and Thomas Babington Macaulay in the Edinburgh Review in 1827, and in a series of anonymous letters to the Morning Chronicle newspaper,[17] censured Moody's contentions and his rhetoric.[17] [43] Moody, in correspondences and in the newspapers, repudiated the assertions by his critics.[17] [42]
Sir Robert Wilmot Horton and Thomas Hyde Villiers MP consequently wrote articles (which were ascribed to the pseudonym 'Vindex', which Moody also used) to The Star newspaper, in which they refuted the objections to Moody's contentions and to the Government's policy.[8] Moody testified before the Privy Council in 1827[8] and in 1828. Moody's reports influenced Lord Bathurst; and Moody's protégé James Stephen; and Moody's successor Sir Henry Taylor. Historian D. J. Murray contends that Hyde Villiers and Taylor were only advisors, rather than experts like Moody and Stephen.[8] Dougan died destitute,[30] in September 1826, before he had completed his reply to Moody's second report,[17] which was completed by his daughter Mary Dougan[30] [1] and annotated by Moody.[17] [1] John Dougan and Moody were each made a Justice of the Peace.[29]
When the British Government renounced the former's plan to settle the Swan River Colony: Sir James Stirling and Moody, in August 1828, offered to form an association of private capitalists to using their own money settle Australia in fulfilment of the 'principles' of William Penn's settlement of Pennsylvania. Moody had previously advised Stirling's relation James Mangles about the settlement of the Swan River Colony at minimal cost to the British Government. Their proposal was rejected by the government.[44] [45]
Moody's office at the Colonial Office was abolished in 1828.[10] [46] [47] His departure from this office was a consequence of his 'unpopularity with the Saints [Evangelical Whigs]'.[10] [46] Moody was then employed in London by the Duke of Wellington to advise on the defence of the West Indies.[9] Moody then returned to the West Indies in 1828 to perform special service in the Dutch Colonies for Sir Robert Wilmot Horton, which he completed in 1829.[48] Moody served as Commander of the Royal Engineers in the West Indies from 1829 to 1832.[49] He on 13 October 1832 was appointed Director of the Royal Gunpowder Manufactory at Waltham Abbey,[50] and of another manufactory of arms at Waltham Abbey.
Moody was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1830;[20] and received a DCL degree from the University of Oxford on 13 June 1834;[51] and was appointed as Inspector of Gunpowder on 2 July 1840;[50] and was posted to Guernsey in 1846; and had been promoted to Colonel by 1847.[20] [2] The British Government consulted Moody for important engineering projects: including the Caledonian Railway, and the West Cumberland Railway, and the Furness Railway, and the embankments at Morecambe Bay and Duddon Sands.[52] Thomas's expertise contributed to the Colonial Office's decision to appoint his son Richard Clement Moody as Lieutenant-Governor of the Falkland Islands in 1841, when Richard Clement Moody was only the unprecedentedly young age of 28 years.
Thomas's residences were: 7 Alfred Place, Bedford Square, Bloomsbury; and 23 Bolton Street, Mayfair;[53] [54] [55] [56] and 13 Curzon Street, Mayfair, where his son Wilmot Horton Moody was raised.[55] Moody died on 5 September 1849 at Berrywood House, Hampshire.[57] On 2 June 1852, an advertisement appeared in The Times of London, for unclaimed property of the value of £120 that had belonged to 'Lieutenant-Colonel [sic] Thomas Moody of Waltham Abbey', the dividends of which had been unclaimed since 1839.
On 1 January 1809, Thomas married Martha Clement (1784 – 1868), who was the daughter of Richard Clement (1753-1829),[58] and the niece of John Dougan (1765 - 1826).[17] Richard Clement, after whom Thomas named his son Richard Clement Moody,[59] was the owner of the Black Bess (196 slaves) and Clement Castle (220 slaves) estates on St Peter's Island that were inherited by Clement's sole remaining son, Hampden Clement.[60] [1] Thomas and Martha had 10 children, 8 of whom were alive at the time of their father's death:[61]