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Wednesday April 24, 2024

Prominent UK royal palaces to review slavery links

By AFP
October 29, 2020

The British charity that manages six royal palaces, including the Tower of London, has launched a review into their historical links to slavery, The Times said on Wednesday.

The chief curator of Historic Royal Palaces (HRP), which runs the regal sites across Britain, is leading the probe into their past relationship with the slave trade. Lucy Worsley, who is also a television historian, told the newspaper her review was overdue and the charity had a duty to make public any slavery connections.

"We’ve been thinking really hard and planning all sorts of changes," she said. "The time has come. We’re behind. We haven’t done well enough." The legacy of Britain’s colonial past and links to slavery have come under scrutiny during anti-racism protests sparked by the death of George Floyd during an arrest by US police.

UK protests saw a statue of a 17’th century slave trader toppled in Bristol, and calls for streets honouring figures who profited from slavery to be renamed. Heritage and conservation charity the National Trust published a report in September into links to slavery and colonialism in the 93 historic properties it manages.

The review, which included scrutiny of World War II prime minister Winston Churchill’s longtime home, Chartwell, in Kent, southeast England, provoked a backlash in some quarters.

The Charity Commission watchdog questioned whether by conducting the investigation the Trust was departing from its primary role of preserving historic sites. Worsley insisted it was vital that HRP’s sites presented an accurate picture of their histories, however uncomfortable that might prove.