The Rev. William Knib [Baptist missionary], with a Landscape of the Mission Chapel and Grounds, Jamaica

Oil-colour print by George Baxter [published 1847], on frame, 28cm x 36cm. Designed, engraved and printed by George Baxter, Patentee of Oil Colour Printing. Additional unframed copy. A written declaration relating to the Abolition of Slavery (August 1st 1838) appears in the background to the portrai...

Full description


Order number: CWM/LMS/Home/West Indies Pictures/1
Date(s) of creation: [1847]
Level: Item
Format: Archive           

collection SOAS Archive
id CWM.LMS.01.09.05.06.01
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
scb_order_with CWM/LMS/Home/West Indies Pictures/1
callnumber CWM/LMS/01/09/05/06/01
callnumber_txt CWM/LMS/01/09/05/06/01
callnumber-sort CWM/LMS/01/09/05/06/01
prefix_number 01
scb_previous_numbers 159, 160
title The Rev. William Knib [Baptist missionary], with a Landscape of the Mission Chapel and Grounds, Jamaica
scb_date_creation [1847]
scb_level Item
level_sort 8/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File/Item
scb_extent 2 copies
format Archive
scb_admin_history William Knibb (1803-1845), English Baptist minister and missionary to Jamaica, 1825-1845, is chiefly known for his work to free enslaved Africans. Knibb began work as the schoolmaster of the Baptist mission school in Kingston and worked closely with fellow missionaries Thomas Burchell and James Phillippo. In 1828 he moved to Savanna-la-Mar. In 1830 he became the minister responsible for the Baptist church at Falmouth, and remained there until his death in 1845. George Baxter (1804-1867) was an engraver and printer who invented a process of colour printing that made reproductions of paintings available on a mass scale. He supplied colour illustrations to the publisher George Mudie and produced prints for the London Missionary Society. Baxter's process incorporated the aquatint method and involved superimposing the colours using wooden blocks. Baxter used carefully etched plates, a hand press, and the finest colours, oils and paper. He mixed the colours himself but left no record of their composition. The process quickly gained popularity and was widely useful in producing replications of paintings. [Source: National Portrait Gallery]
scb_custodial_history Prints held as part of the LMS Museum (inventory items 159 and 160) before being transferred to SOAS Library in January 2008.
description Oil-colour print by George Baxter [published 1847], on frame, 28cm x 36cm. Designed, engraved and printed by George Baxter, Patentee of Oil Colour Printing. Additional unframed copy. A written declaration relating to the Abolition of Slavery (August 1st 1838) appears in the background to the portrait, in addition to a group of freed, formerly enslaved Africans, slaves and discarded manacles.
scb_access_status Open
language English
language_search English
scb_physc_charac_tech_reqs Heavy discolouration of framed copy.
scb_related_material Books about William Knibb can be found in the Council for World Mission Library, SOAS, including, 'Memoir of William Knibb, missionary in Jamaica', by John Howard Hinton (London: 1847), ref: CWML R334, and 'William Knibb, missionary in jamaica: a memoir', by Mrs John James Smith (London: 1896), ref: CWML R362.
hierarchy_top_id_raw CWM
hierarchy_sequence CWM.00LMS.0001.0009.0005.0006.0001