Montserrat slave rebellion of 1768
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| Montserrat slave rebellion of 1768 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Part of slave revolts in North America | |||
Map of Montserrat (19th century) | |||
| Date | 1768 | ||
| Location | 16°42′N 62°12′W / 16.7°N 62.2°W | ||
| Goals | Liberation | ||
| Resulted in | Rebellion suppressed | ||
| Parties | |||
| |||
| Lead figures | |||
| Outcome | |||
| Death | 9 executed | ||
| Part of a series on |
| North American slave revolts |
|---|
The Montserrat slave rebellion of 1768 was an unsuccessful slave rebellion in the British colony of Montserrat in the Caribbean Sea that took place on 17 March 1768.
Irish colonists began to settle Montserrat in the 1630s following tensions with English colonists in nearby Saint Kitts[1] and started importing African slaves in 1650 to work on the island's cotton, tobacco, and sugarcane plantations.[2] By the late 1760s, as a result of dwindling provisions, labour shortages, and increasingly strict oversight, slaves faced worsening living conditions.[3]
Uprising
By 1768, slaves outnumbered white colonists by three to one,[1] and black and creole Montserratians, led by the slave Cudjoe, decided to stage an uprising against the plantation owners.[3] 17 March was chosen as the day of the uprising as the rebels knew that their Irish enslavers would be drinking heavily for St Patrick's Day.[4]
The rebels planned for domestic slaves at Government House to seize any weapons held there[5] while other slaves would arm themselves with rocks, farm tools, clubs and homemade swords,[1] but the plot was disclosed by a female slave to an Irishwoman,[6] leading to a successful quashing of the rebellion.
Repercussions
Nine rebels, including Cudjoe, were hanged,[4] and his head placed on a silk-cotton tree as a warning to slaves considering another revolt.[5] Thirty other rebels were imprisoned and then sold to other islands.[5]