Joanna Vassa

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Joanna Vassa's Tombstone at Abney Park Cemetery shortly after its discovery in 2005, awaiting restoration
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Joanna Vassa's Tombstone at Abney Park Cemetery shortly after its discovery in 2005, awaiting restoration

Joanna Vassa (1795-1857) was the only surviving descendant of author, Methodist and leading Anti-Slavery campaigner Olaudah Equiano, otherwise known as Gustavus Vassa the African.

Joanna's early life was tragic. In 1796, only a year after her birth, her English mother, Susannah Cullen of Fordham, Cambridgeshire, died, and was buried at St Andrew's Church, Soham. In the following year, her famous West African father Equiano died in London (31st March 1797, aged 52), and this was shortly followed by the death of her young sister Anna Maria (b.1793), on 21st July.

In 1816, on reaching her 21st birthday Joanna Vassa, being Equiano's only known surviving relative, inherited a silver watch and £950 from his former estate; a figure that would perhaps be worth a hundred times that value today.

She married the Congregational minister, the Rev. Henry Bromley, whose first position was at Appledore in Devon, where he worked for five years.

The Silver Birch Woods at Abney Park Cemetery provide the sylvan setting for Joanna Vassa's Tombstone
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The Silver Birch Woods at Abney Park Cemetery provide the sylvan setting for Joanna Vassa's Tombstone

For many years Joanna Vassa (Bromley) lived near the Congregational Chapel at Clavering in Essex, England, where her husband, the Rev. Henry Bromley was pastor between 1827 and 1845.

Joanna and her husband moved to London in 1845, for her health, her husband taking on only ocassional commitments at Clavering thereafter; the chapel relying on students from Cheshunt College until a permanent appointment could be made. In about 1870, the Clavering Congregational Chapel needed extensive repair and a new one was built on its site, opening in August 1872 with dedicating prayers by Rev. Henry Bromley and other invited ministers.

Joanna died on March 10th 1857 aged 61. She was buried on March 16th close to the memorial statue to Isaac Watts in Dr Watts Walk, the principal axial walk of Abney Park Cemetery. Her husband Henry survived her for twenty years, and was buried with her on February 12th 1878. It has not been discovered whether Joanna had any children. 2007, the 150th anniversary of her death, concides with the bicentenary of the first legislation of the British parliament that began to outlaw the West African and transatlantic slave trade into which her father had been sold.