William Winniett


Sir William Robert Wolseley Winniett was the Governor General of Gold Coast at Cape Coast Castle. He worked to abolish the slave trade on the Slave Coast of West Africa.

Royal Navy

Winniett joined the Royal Navy at Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1807 on. While aboard Cleopatra, under the command of Samuel Pechell, Winniett fought in the Action of 22 January 1809 and the Invasion of Martinique.
He also served on the flagship under Sir Alexander Cochrane, Commander-in-Chief, North American Station. During that time, Winniett was involved in the Battle of Lake Borgne, in Louisiana in December 1814 and the Battle of New Orleans on 8 January 1815. Cochrane created a proclamation that invited Black slaves to freedom by joining the crews of the Royal Navy.
On 24 December 1818, he was assigned to Morgiana, which was on the African coastal patrol to suppress the slave trade. He commanded , Firefly and Lightning.

British Governor

On 24 October 1845 Winniett became lieutenant governor of the Gold Coast, under the jurisdiction of the Governor of Sierra Leone. He went to the capital of Abomey to try to abolish the slave trade.
In 1848 he led the West India Regiments and others to stop the murdering of Africans and Europeans by deposing Kaku Aka, the king of Amanahia .
With Thomas Birch Freeman as his secretary, that same year, he went to the Kingdom of Ashanti to persuade Ghezo, King of the Dahomey, in present-day Benin to stop the slave trade and abolish human sacrifice.
He also purchased Dutch fortresses on the Slave Coast to end Dutch slave trade.
He was knighted by Queen Victoria on 29 June 1849 at Buckingham Palace.
He died 4 December 1850 at Jamestown/Usshertown, Accra and was interred in the cemetery at Fort Christiansborg.

Family

Winniett was the grandchild of Joseph Winniett and the son of William Winniett, both of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia. His family had seven boys and six girls. His great aunt Anne Cosby was married to Nova Scotia Council member Major Alexander Cosby. She freed her three black slaves in 1788.
He was the son-in-law of William Fenwick Williams.
Winniett was also the maternal grandson of New York Loyalist Joseph Totten, from whose family Tottenville, Staten Island was named.

Legacy

The Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society placed a memorial at Sir Winniett's in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia in 1880.

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