Attack and capture of the Crête-à-Pierrot (Combat et prise de la Crête-à-Pierrot, March 1802) in the Haitian Revolution by Auguste Raffet, engraving by Ernest Hébert
Context
Atlantic slave trade
Maroons
Slavery among indigenous peoples
Slavery in Canada
Cuba
Haiti
Latin America
Bahamas
New France
New Spain
British and French Caribbean
British Virgin Islands
United States
colonial US
Before 1700
1521 Santo Domingo Slave Revolt
(Santo Domingo)
1526 San Miguel de Gualdape
(Spanish Florida, victorious)
1548–1558, 1579–1582 Bayano Wars
(Real Audiencia of Panama, New Spain, suppressed)
c. 1570 Gaspar Yanga's Revolt
(Veracruz, New Spain, victorious)
1601 Acaxee Rebellion
(New Spain, suppressed)
1616 Tepehuán Revolt
(New Spain, suppressed)
1680 Pueblo Revolt
(Santa Fe de Nuevo México, New Spain, victorious)
18th century
1712 New York Slave Revolt
(British Province of New York, suppressed)
1730 First Maroon War
(British Jamaica, victorious)
1730 Chesapeake rebellion
(British Chesapeake Colonies, suppressed)
1731 Samba rebellion
(Louisiana, New France, suppressed)
1733 St. John Slave Revolt
(Danish Saint John, suppressed)
1739 Stono Rebellion
(British Province of South Carolina, suppressed)
1741 New York Conspiracy
(British Province of New York, suppressed)
1760–61 Tacky's Revolt
(British Jamaica, suppressed)
1768 Montserrat slave rebellion
(British Montserrat, suppressed)
1787 Abaco Slave Revolt
(British Bahamas, suppressed)
1791 Mina Conspiracy
(Louisiana, New Spain, suppressed)
1795 Pointe Coupée Conspiracy
(Louisiana, New Spain, suppressed)
1795 Curaçao Slave Revolt of 1795
(Dutch Curaçao, suppressed)
1791–1804 Haitian Revolution
(French Saint-Domingue, victorious)
19th century
1800 Gabriel's Rebellion
(Virginia, suppressed)
1803 Igbo Landing
(St. Simons Island, Georgia, victorious)
1805 Chatham Manor
(Virginia, suppressed)
1811 German Coast Uprising
(Territory of Orleans, suppressed)
1811 Aponte conspiracy
(Spanish Cuba, suppressed)
1815 George Boxley
(Virginia, suppressed)
1816 Bussa's Rebellion
(British Barbados, suppressed)
1822 Vesey Plot
(South Carolina, suppressed)
1825 Great African Slave Revolt
(Cuba, suppressed)
1831 Nat Turner's rebellion
(Virginia, suppressed)
1831–32 Baptist War
(British Jamaica, suppressed)
1839 Amistad, ship rebellion
(off the Cuban coast, victorious)
1841 Creole case, ship rebellion
(off the Southern U.S. coast, victorious)
1842 slave revolt in the Cherokee Nation
(Indian Territory, suppressed)
1843–44 Ladder Conspiracy
(Spanish Cuba, suppressed)
1859 John Brown's raid
(Virginia, suppressed)
Notable leaders
Carolta
Charles Deslondes
Denmark Vesey
François Mackandal
Gabriel Prosser
Gaspar Yanga
Jean Saint Malo
Jean-Jacques Dessalines
John Brown
Joseph Cinqué
Madison Washington
Marcos Xiorro
Maria
Nanny of the Maroons
Nat Turner
Toussaint Louverture
Tula
v
t
e
Part of a series on
Slavery
Contemporary
Child labour
Child soldiers
Conscription
Debt
Forced marriage
Bride buying
Child marriage
Wife selling
Forced prostitution
Human trafficking
Peonage
Penal labour
Contemporary Africa
21st-century jihadism
Sexual slavery
Wage slavery
Historical
Antiquity
Egypt
Babylonia
Greece
Rome
Medieval Europe
Ancillae
Black Sea slave trade
Byzantine Empire
Kholop
Prague slave trade
Serfs
History
In Russia
Emancipation
Thrall
Venetian slave trade
Balkan slave trade
Muslim world
Slavery in the Abbasid Caliphate
Slavery in Al-Andalus
Baqt
Contract of manumission
Bukhara slave trade
Crimean slave trade
Khivan slave trade
Ottoman Empire
Avret Esir Pazarları
Barbary Coast
slave trade
pirates
Sack of Baltimore
Slave raid of Suðuroy
Turkish Abductions
Concubinage
history
Ma malakat aymanukum
Avret Esir Pazarları
Harem
Abbasid harem
Ottoman Imperial Harem
Safavid harem
Qajar harem
Jarya/Cariye
Odalisque
Qiyan
Umm walad
Circassian slave trade
Saqaliba
Slavery in the Umayyad Caliphate
21st century
Atlantic slave trade
Bristol
Brazil
Database
Dutch
Middle Passage
Nantes
New France
Panyarring
Spanish Empire
Slave Coast
Thirteen colonies
Topics and practice
Conscription
Ghilman
Mamluk
Devshirme
Blackbirding
Coolie
Corvée labor
Field slaves in the United States
Treatment
House slaves
Saqaliba
Slave market
Slave raiding
Child soldiers
White slavery
Naval
Galley slave
Impressment
Pirates
Shanghaiing
Slave ship
By country or region
Sub-Saharan Africa
Contemporary Africa
Trans-Saharan slave trade
Red Sea slave trade
Indian Ocean slave trade
Zanzibar slave trade
Angola
Chad
Comoros
Ethiopia
Mali
Mauritania
Niger
Nigeria
Seychelles
Somalia
Somali slave trade
South Africa
Sudan
Zanzibar
North and South America
Pre-Columbian America
Aztec
Americas indigenous
U.S. Natives
United States
Field slaves
female
Contemporary
maps
partus
prison labor
Slave codes
Treatment
interregional
Human trafficking
The Bahamas
Canada
Caribbean
Barbados
British Virgin Islands
Trinidad
Code Noir
Latin America
Brazil
Lei Áurea
Colombia
Cuba
Haiti
revolt
Restavek
(Encomienda)
Puerto Rico
East, Southeast, and South Asia
Human trafficking in Southeast Asia
Bhutan
China
Booi Aha
Laogai
penal system
India
Debt bondage
Chukri System
Japan
comfort women
Korea
Kwalliso
Maldives
Slavery in the Mongol Empire
Thailand
Yankee princess
Vietnam
Australia and Oceania
Australia
Human trafficking
Blackbirding
Slave raiding in Easter Island
Human trafficking in Papua New Guinea
Blackbirding in Polynesia
Europe and North Asia
Sex trafficking in Europe
Britain
Denmark
Dutch Republic
Germany in World War II
Malta
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Spain
Sweden
North Africa and West Asia
Afghanistan
Algeria
Bahrain
Egypt
Human trafficking in the Middle East
Iran
Iraq
Jordan
Kuwait
Lebanon
Libya
Morocco
Oman
Palestine
Saudi Arabia
Syria
Tunisia
Qatar
Yemen
United Arab Emirates
Religion
Bible
Christianity
Catholicism
Mormonism
Islam
Judaism
Baháʼí Faith
Opposition and resistance
1926 Slavery Convention
Abolitionism
U.K.
U.S.
Abolitionists
Anglo-Egyptian Slave Trade Convention
Anti-Slavery International
Blockade of Africa
U.K.
U.S.
Colonization
Liberia
Sierra Leone
Compensated emancipation
Freedman
manumission
Freedom suit
Slave Power
Underground Railroad
songs
Slave rebellion
Slave Trade Acts
International law
Third Servile War
13th Amendment to the United States Constitution
Timeline of abolition of slavery and serfdom
Abolition of slave trade in Persian gulf [fa]
Related
Common law
Indentured servitude
Unfree labour
Fugitive slaves
laws
Great Dismal Swamp maroons
List of slaves
owners
last survivors of American slavery
Marriage of enslaved people (United States)
Slave narrative
films
songs
Slave name
Slave catcher
Slave patrol
Slave Route Project
breeding
court cases
Washington
Jefferson
J.Q. Adams
Lincoln
Emancipation Proclamation
40 acres
Freedmen's Bureau
Iron bit
Emancipation Day
v
t
e
The New York Slave Revolt of 1712 was an uprising in New York City, in the Province of New York, of 23 Black slaves. They killed nine whites and injured another six before they were stopped. More than 70 black people were arrested and jailed. Of these, 27 were put on trial, and 21 convicted and executed.
and 24 Related for: New York Slave Revolt of 1712 information
Gloucester County, Virginia Revolt (1663); NewYorkSlaveRevoltof1712; Stono Rebellion (1739); and NewYorkSlave Insurrection of 1741. Within the British...
people are touched, the last of whom is Samuel Johnson. April 6–7 – NewYorkSlaveRevoltof1712: An insurrection in NewYork City results in nine whites...
initiate an armed slaverevolt in Southern states by taking over Harpers Ferry Armory in Virginia. 1859: The Second Italian War of Independence. 1861–65:...
decades of the 19th century, there were significant increases in the city's black population, as large numbers of freed and fugitive slaves immigrated...
Emancipation Proclamation of January 1863 alarmed much of the white working class in NewYork, who feared that freed slaves would migrate to the city...
the effect of a clap of thunder from a clear sky. The slave men stood aghast. The officials were frightened at this new move on the part of the supposed...
1521 Santo Domingo SlaveRevolt in the Spanish colony of Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola took place around the time of Christmas festivities...
Unification of a Slave State: The Rise of the Planter Class in the South Carolina Backcountry, 1760–1808. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina...
Tuscarora War in fighting with the Tuscarora people. 1712 – NewYorkSlaveRevoltof1712. 1713 – Treaty of Utrecht ends Queen Anne's War. 1715 – South Carolina...
colonial era), the first being a slave after the NewYorkSlaveRevoltof1712. The last hanging in chains was in 1913, of John Marshall in West Virginia...
Cato's Rebellion) was a slaverevolt that began on 9 September 1739, in the colony of South Carolina. It was the largest slave rebellion in the Southern...
involvement in the triangular slave trade. Along with similar events in Narragansett Bay, the affair marked the first acts of violent uprising against Crown...
Land: The NewYorkSlaveRevoltof1712. Westholme Publishing. ISBN 9781594163562. Sebro, Louise (2013), "The 1733 SlaveRevolt on the Island of St. John:...
The 1689 Boston revolt was a popular uprising on April 18, 1689 against the rule of Sir Edmund Andros, the governor of the Dominion ofNew England. A well-organized...
Virginia, as retaliation for the new whiskey taxes. McCleery felt threatened enough by the angry mob to disguise himself as a slave, flee from his home and swim...