William Willshire
William Willshire also known as William Wiltshire (c. 1790 – 4 August 1851), was British
Vice Consul to
Mogadore (Essaouira),
Morocco from 1814 until 1844, before being assigned to the
Consularship of
Adrianople (Edirne) in 1845, until his death in 1851.
A native of London, he became an employee of English trading house James Renshaw and Co, and in early 1814 he was dispatched to Mogadore as that company's agent there. In the years thereafter he established himself as the foremost European
merchant in the city, which was at that time an important trading port linking
Saharan and
Sub-Saharan Africa to Europe and North America. Today Willshire is best remembered as the man who redeemed, cared for, and helped repatriate hundreds of Western
sailors enslaved in the
Sultanate of Morocco during the early part of the 19th century, including
Captain James Riley,
Robert Adams, and
Captain Alexander Scott, all of whom would later write and publish harrowing accounts of their hardships endured as slaves in the
desert. The town of
Willshire in the US state of
Ohio is named after him, in thanks, by James Riley.
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