Skip to main content
Box 2017-294
Tobacco Box
Box 2017-294

Tobacco Box

Date1800-1840
Maker British, 1709 - 1969
MediumIron
DimensionsOH: 3 ½ in; OD: 5 3/8 in; OW: 3 ½ in. (with lid in place)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2017-294,A&B
DescriptionRectangular cast iron box on four small rectangular feet; with removable rectangular cast iron lid with beaded edge and relief-cast image of a kneeling slave above the word “HUMANITY”Label TextIn the late 18th century, British manufacturers began to make objects promoting the abolition of slavery. Among the earliest and best known was the ceramic medallion produced by Josiah Wedgwood depicting a chained slave, surrounded by the phrase “AM I NOT A MAN AND A BROTHER.” First introduced in 1787, the imagery of Wedgwood’s medallion soon was incorporated, with and without modifications, into an array of anti-slavery items including printed pamphlets, ceramic sugar bowls, cloth purses, and cast iron boxes.
This box, cast with the word “HUMANITY” beneath a kneeling man shackled at wrists and ankles, was probably made at England’s largest ironworks in Shropshire during the early decades of the nineteenth century. A similar example survives in the Hull Museum with its original internal presser—used to keep the tobacco fresh—bearing the name Coalbrook Dale Co. Since tobacco cultivation was dependent on slave labor, the use of this imagery on the lid of this cast iron box was a compelling reminder of the human trafficking that the abolitionist movements in both England and America sought to eradicate.
Tea Chest 1974-87
1755-1770
D2012-CMD, Clock R.2012-929
George Woltz
1795-1805
2019-72, Hot Water Urn
Thomas Whipham II & Charles Wright
1761-1762
D2006-CMD-1399
Sally Jennings
1797
D2012-CMD. Clock R.2012-927
Caleb Davis (1769-1834)
1805-1815
D2014-CMD. Sugar box 1961-38
John Coney
ca. 1700
TC94-254
James Huston
1770-1780
1973.2000.3, Clock
Johannes Spitler
1800
D2012-CMD. Clock
Thomas Worswick
1760-1780