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Black Rebellion |
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| Author
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Thomas Wentworth Higginson
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| Category
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African-American Studies
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| Language
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English
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| Published
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1889
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| Notes
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This text contains five chapters of T.W. Higgison's Travellers and Outlaws. This collection is commonly referred to as Black Rebellion: five slave revolts.
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| Extract
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f Maroon independence, had passed away; and "Old Montagu" reigned
in their stead, in Trelawney Town. Old Montagu had all the pomp and circumstance
of Maroon majesty: he wore a laced red coat, and a hat superb with gold lace
and plumes; none but captains could sit in his presence; he was helped first
at meals, and no woman could eat beside him; he presided at councils as magnificently
as at table, though with less appetite; and possessed, meanwhile, not an atom
of the love or reverence of any human being. The real power lay entirely with
Major James, the white superintendent, who had been brought up among the Maroons
by his father (and predecessor), and who was the idol of this wild race. In
an evil hour, the Government removed him, and put a certain unpopular Capt.
Craskell in his place; and as there happened to be, about the same time, a great
excitement concerning a hopeful pair of young Maroons, who had been seized and
publicly whipped on a charge of hog-stealing, their kindred refused to allow
the new sup
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