James Webbe Tobin (1767–1814) was an English abolitionist, the son of a plantation owner on Nevis. He was a political radical, and friend of leading literary men.[1]
In the 1790s Tobin befriended Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth;[5] Wordsworth knew, through Basil Montagu and Francis Wrangham, the sons of John Pretor Pinney, and may have met Tobin through Montagu, or the Pinneys.[1][6] Tobin brought Tom Wedgewood to meet Coleridge and Wordsworth in September 1797; Wedgwood later became Coleridge's patron.[7][8] In letters of 1798, Wordsworth announced to Tobin, then James Losh, his major poetic project under the working title The Recluse.[9]
Tobin had a degenerative eye condition, and at this period he was only partially sighted, ruling out a career.[10] During 1799 he took part in the nitrous oxide experiments of Humphry Davy.[11] He was an observer when Davy experimented with other inhalations.[12]
From 1807 Tobin and his family were on Nevis.[1] He took a leading part in the cruelty case brought in 1810 against the plantation owner Edward Huggins; Huggins had bought the Montravers estate on Nevis from the Pretor Pinney family in 1808.[13] Huggins was acquitted; Tobin made his views known, writing in particular to Hugh Elliot, the Governor of the Leeward Islands, claiming that the jury was packed.[1][14] The Christian Observer noted that Tobin's blindness meant he could not be challenged to a duel for his stand.[15]James Stephen wrote that others who backed him did not escape feuds.[16]
Works
Tobin contributed to The Annual Anthology edited by Robert Southey, and edited its third volume (1802).[17][18] In 1812 he wrote a Reply to the pamphlet A plain statement of the motives which gave rise to the public punishment of several negroes (1811), by Thomas John Cottle, son-in-law of Edward Huggins.[19]
Family
Tobin married Jane Mallet or Mullett (1784–1837) in 1807.[1][20][21] She was the daughter of Thomas Mullett (1745–1814), a Bristol stationer connected by marriage to Caleb Evans, a Particular Baptist minister in Bristol.[22] They had at least four children, including the eldest son John James, born 1808/9, the friend of Humphry Davy.[1][23]
After her husband's death, Jane Tobin and her family returned to England.[24]