Black Resistance To Slavery Essay, Research Paper
African-Americans resisted slavery in a couple of different ways. They had slave uprisings, spoke out against slavery, and also they ran away from slavery through the Underground Railroad. One way more than the rest helped the white community to realize that the African-Americans were willing to give up their lives for this cause. That these were people, not animals and that a war was on its way. This was shown through the numerous slave revolts.
Denmark Vesey was sold first as a slave in 1781 to a Bermuda captain named Joseph Vesey ( Denmark Vesey 1). Denmark assumed his master s surname and accompanied him on numerous voyages, and in 1783 Denmark settled with his owner in Charleston ( Denmark Vesey 1). Denmark won a street lottery and he bought his own freedom ( Denmark Vesey 1). He then became a carpenter and he had trouble working with all of the other white workers ( Denmark Vesey 1). He was an educated man and he already knew of the great Haitian slave revolt of the 1790s ( Denmark Vesey 1). He resented the continued enslavement of his children and his second class treatment on the job ( Denmark Vesey 1). He was determined to do something about slavery and the overall treatment of African-Americans ( Denmark Vesey 1). Vesey planned and organized an uprising of city and plantation blacks ( Denmark Vesey 1). The plan called for the rebels to attack guardhouses and arsenals, seize their arms, kill whites, burn and destroy the city, and free the slaves on the night of June 16, 1822 ( Denmark Vesey 1). As many as 9,000 blacks may have been involved with this plan ( Denmark Vesey 1). The only problem was that a house servant over heard the plan and brought it to white authorities ( Denmark Vesey 1). These authorities made massive military preparations, which prevented the insurrection ( Denmark Vesey 1). During the ensuing two months, some 130 blacks were arrested ( Denmark Vesey 1). In the trials that followed, 67 were convicted of trying to raise an insurrection; of these, 35, including Vesey, were hanged, and 32 were condemned to exile ( Denmark Vesey 1). In addition, four white men were fined and imprisoned for encouraging the plot ( Denmark Vesey 1).
The only effective, sustained slave uprising was led by American bondsman Nat Turner ( Nat Turner 1). Nat Turner was born the property of a prosperous small-plantation owner in a remote area of Virginia ( Nat Turner 1). His mother was an African native who passed on a passionate hatred of slavery to her son ( Nat Turner 1). He learned to read from one of the master s sons, and eagerly absorbed intensive religious training ( Nat Turner 1). In the early 1820s he was sold to a neighboring farmer ( Nat Turner 1). During the following decade he became very religious and he saw himself called upon by God to lead his people out of bondage ( Nat Turner 1). He began to exert a powerful influence on many of the nearby slaves, who called him the Prophet ( Nat Turner 1). In 1831, shortly after he had been sold again, he saw a sign in the form of an eclipse of the Sun ( Nat Turner 1). This caused Nat Turner to believe that the time was near to strike back against the whites ( Nat Turner 1). His plan was to capture the armory at the country seat, Jerusalem, and, having gathered many recruits, to press on to the Dismal Swamp, where capture would be difficult ( Nat Turner 1). On the night of August 21, together with seven fellow slaves in whom he had put his trust, he launched his campaign, murdering his owner and his family in their sleep and then setting forth on a bloody march toward Jerusalem. In two days and nights about 60 white people were slain ( Nat Turner 1). Doomed from the start, Turner s insurrection was handicapped by lack of discipline among his followers and by the fact that only 75 blacks rallied to his cause ( Nat Turner 1). Armed resistance from the local whites and the arrival of the state militia, about 3,000 men, provided the final crushing blow ( Nat Turner 1). Only a few miles from the country seat the rebels were dispersed and either killed or captured, and many innocent slaves were massacred in the hysteria that followed ( Nat Turner 1). Turner eluded his pursuers for six weeks but finally was captured and hanged ( Nat Turner 1).
By the summer of 1859, John Brown had finalized his plans for attack. His target was the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferr
Works Cited
Nat Turner Yahoo. 2001 http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=75803&tocid=0 (5/20/01).
Denmark Vesey Yahoo. 2001. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=77148&tocid=0 (5/20/01).
Harpers Ferry Yahoo. 2001. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/brown/peopleevents/pande09.html (5/20/01).
John Brown Yahoo. 2001. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2940.html (5/20/01)