A founder in 1830 of the National Colonization Society, Charles Tennant (1796 1873) advocated government support for emigration to Britain's colonies as a means of alleviating poverty at home and boosting the workforce overseas. Briefly representing St Albans in Parliament, he later wrote treatises on contemporary political and financial questions, notably arguing for the abolition of income tax in The People's Blue Book (1857). Also published anonymously, the present work, which appeared in 1864, offers a critique of John Stuart Mill's Utilitarianism (1863). Tennant argues that happiness...
A founder in 1830 of the National Colonization Society, Charles Tennant (1796 1873) advocated government support for emigration to Britain's colonies ...