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Tacky's War

 
Wikipedia: Tacky's War
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1712 New York Slave Revolt
Location: New York City, Fate: Suppressed
1733 St. John Slave Revolt
Location: Saint John, Fate: Suppressed
1739 Stono Rebellion
Location: South Carolina, Fate: Suppressed
1741 New York Conspiracy
Location: New York City, Fate: Suppressed
1760 Tacky's War
Location: Jamaica, Fate: Suppressed
1791–1804 Haitian Revolution
Location: Saint-Domingue, Fate: Victorious
1800 Gabriel Prosser
Location: Virginia, Fate: Suppressed
1805 Chatham Manor
Location: Virginia, Fate: Suppressed
1811 German Coast Uprising
Location: Territory of Orleans, Fate: Suppressed
1815 George Boxley
Location: Virginia, Fate: Suppressed
1822 Denmark Vesey
Location: South Carolina, Fate: Suppressed
1831 Nat Turner's rebellion
Location: Virginia, Fate: Suppressed
1831–1832 Baptist War
Location: Jamaica, Fate: Suppressed
1839 Amistad, ship rebellion
Location: Off the Cuban coast, Fate: Victorious
1841 Creole, ship rebellion
Location: Off the Southern U.S. coast, Fate: Victorious
1859 John Brown's Raid
Location: Virginia, Fate: Suppressed

Tacky's War, or Tacky's Rebellion, was an uprising of black African slaves that occurred in Jamaica in May, June and July of 1760. It was the most significant slave rebellion in the Caribbean until the Haitian Revolution in 1790.

The leader of the rebellion, Tacky, had been a Coromantee chief before being enslaved. Beginning in St. Mary in the early morning of Easter Monday, Tacky and a group of supporters, most or all Coromantee, moved inland. They took over plantations and killed the white plantation owners. Their plan was to overthrow British rule and to establish an African kingdom in Jamaica. Unfortunately for the rebellion, a slave from one of the rebel controlled plantations escaped and informed white authorities. After the mobilization of a planter militia, regular troops and a Maroon force allied to the British, many of the rebels returned to their plantations. Some, including Tacky, fought on, but when Tacky was killed by a Maroon sharpshooter, the last fighters killed themselves before capture. Tacky's Rebellion was, like many other Atlantic slave revolts, put down quickly and mercilessly by colonial authority. However, Tacky's actions spurred unrest and disorder throughout the island, and it took the local forces some weeks to reestablish order.

Further reading

  • Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2006), Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion., Westport, CT: Greenwood 
  • Burnard, Trevor (2004), Mastery, Tyranny and Desire: Thomas Thistlewood and His Slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican World, Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, pp. 170–2, ISBN 0-8078-5525-1 

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