Richard Oswald 1705-1784
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Richard Oswald was born in Scotland in 1705 to the Reverend George Oswald of Dunnet. He is best known as the British peace commissioner in Paris in 1782. He had an extensive career as a merchant, slave trader, and advisor to the British Ministry on trade regulations and the conduct of the American Revolutionary War.
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[edit] Merchant
As a young man Oswald lived for six years in Virginia as a merchant. He then returned to England and established himself as a merchant in London for the next thirty years. While in London, he devoted a considerable amount of time to the African Slave Trade. In 1748, the firm of Alexander Grant, Richard Oswald, and Company purchased Bance Island, on the Sierra Leone River, where the Royal African Company had erected a fort. Oswald and his associates gained control of other small islands through treaties with native chiefs and established on Bance Island a trading station for factors in the trafficking of slaves.[1]
[edit] Peace Commissioner
In 1782, Oswald was selected by Lord Shelburne to open negotiations with the Americans. Because of his prior living experience in America and his knowledge of its geography and trade he had been frequently consulted by the British Ministry about the war. The informal negotiations were to be held in Paris. Lord Shelburne chose Oswald because he thought it would appeal to Benjamin Franklin. Oswald shared Franklin's free trade commercial views; he possessed a "philosophic disposition"; and he had previously had a limited correspondence with Franklin.[2] Franklin was impressed with Oswald's negotiating skills and described him as a man with an "Air of great Simplicity and Honesty."[3]
[edit] Treaty of Paris
On July 25, 1782, official negotiations began. The preliminary articles were signed by Oswald for Great Britain, and John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, and Henry Laurens for the United States on November 30, 1782. With almost no alterations, these articles were made into a treaty on September 3, 1783. Oswald was criticized in England for giving the Americans too much. The Duke of Richmond urged the recall of Oswald, charging that he "plead only the Cause of America, not of Britain."[4] Oswald resigned his cabinet and returned to his estate of Auchincruive in Ayrshire where he died on November 6, 1784.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
http://www.clements.umich.edu/webguides/Arlenes/NP/Oswald.html