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Black rebellion: five slave revolts / Thomas Wentworth Higginson; introduction by James M. McPherson.

By: Publication details: New York: Da Capo Press, 1998.Edition: First Da Capo Press editionDescription: x, 221 pages; 18 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0306808676
  • 9780306808678
Uniform titles:
  • Travellers and outlaws: Selections
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 970/.00496 21
LOC classification:
  • E447 .H53 1998
Online resources: Summary: Black Rebellion is a fascinating account of five slave insurrections: the Maroons, escaped slaves in the West Indies and South America who successfully resisted larger British armies while living an independent existence for generations in the mountains and jungles of Jamaica and Surinam; Gabriel Prosser, who recruited about 1,000 fellow slaves in 1800 to launch a rebellion throughout Virginia; Denmark Vesey, an ex-slave, seaman, and artisan, who conspired in 1822 to kill the whites in Charleston, South Carolina and take over the city; and the revolutionary mystic Nat Turner, who in 1831 organized and led the most successful and dramatic slave revolt in North America. The author also describes how whites responded with panic, sweeping arrests, mass executions, and more repressive laws in a futile effort to extinguish the slaves' insatiable desire to be free. --from back cover.
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Books Books OCLC Data Available 0000000008448

Previously published, New York: Arno Press, 1969.

Black rebellion consists of the last five chapters of "Travellers and outlaws" (Boston, 1889).

Black Rebellion is a fascinating account of five slave insurrections: the Maroons, escaped slaves in the West Indies and South America who successfully resisted larger British armies while living an independent existence for generations in the mountains and jungles of Jamaica and Surinam; Gabriel Prosser, who recruited about 1,000 fellow slaves in 1800 to launch a rebellion throughout Virginia; Denmark Vesey, an ex-slave, seaman, and artisan, who conspired in 1822 to kill the whites in Charleston, South Carolina and take over the city; and the revolutionary mystic Nat Turner, who in 1831 organized and led the most successful and dramatic slave revolt in North America. The author also describes how whites responded with panic, sweeping arrests, mass executions, and more repressive laws in a futile effort to extinguish the slaves' insatiable desire to be free. --from back cover.

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