Conditions in New York are ripe for…
1712 CE
Conditions in New York are ripe for rebellion.
Enslaved Africans live within proximity of each other, making communication easy.
They also often work among free blacks, a situation that does not exist on most plantations.
Slaves in the city can communicate and plan a conspiracy more easily than among those on plantations.
They are kept under abusive and harsh conditions, and naturally resent their treatment.
The men gather on the night of April 6, 1712, and set fire to a building on Maiden Lane near Broadway.
While the white colonists try to put out the fire, the enslaved African Americans attack them and run off.
Seventy blacks are arrested and put in jail.
Six are reported to have committed suicide.
Twenty-seven are put on trial, twenty-one of whom ware convicted and sentenced to death.
Twenty are burned to death and one is executed on a breaking wheel.
This is a form of punishment no longer used on whites at this time.
The severity of punishment is in proportion to white fears of insurrection.
After the revolt, laws governing the lives of blacks in New York are made more restrictive.
African Americans are not permitted to gather in groups of more than three, they are not permitted to carry firearms, and gambling is outlawed.
Other crimes, such as property damage, rape, and conspiracy to kill, are made punishable by death.
Free blacks are no longer allowed to own land.
Slave owners who decide to free their slaves are required to pay a tax of two hundred pounds, a price much higher than the price of a slave.