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List of plantations in Virginia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of plantations and/or plantation houses in the U.S. state of Virginia that are National Historic Landmarks, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, other historic registers, or are otherwise significant for their history, association with significant events or people, or their architecture and design.[1][2][3]

Color key Historic register listing
National Memorial
National Historic Landmark
National Register of Historic Places
Not listed
NRHP reference number Name Image Date designated Locality County Notes
66000040 Arlington House
October 15, 1966 Arlington
38°53′06″N 77°04′24″W / 38.88500°N 77.07333°W / 38.88500; -77.07333 (Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee National Memorial)
Arlington Home of Confederate General Robert E. Lee
78003012 Red Hill
February 14, 1978 Brookneal
37°01′56″N 78°53′53″W / 37.03222°N 78.89806°W / 37.03222; -78.89806 (Red Hill, The Patrick Henry National Memorial)
Campbell Home of Revolutionary firebrand Patrick Henry
66000849 Bacon's Castle
Bacon's Castle
October 9, 1960 Bacon's Castle
37°06′34″N 76°43′19″W / 37.10944°N 76.72182°W / 37.10944; -76.72182 (Bacon's Castle)
Surry
69000243 Belle Grove Plantation
August 11, 1969 Middletown
39°01′15″N 78°18′14″W / 39.02078°N 78.30381°W / 39.02078; -78.30381 (Belle Grove)
Frederick
71001040 Berkeley
November 11, 1971 Charles City
37°19′02″N 77°10′50″W / 37.31710°N 77.18050°W / 37.31710; -77.18050 (Berkeley)
Charles City
69000246 Berry Hill
HABS photograph
November 11, 1971 South Boston
36°41′48″N 78°56′39″W / 36.69673°N 78.94422°W / 36.69673; -78.94422 (Berry Hill)
Halifax
69000271 Brandon
Brandon
April 15, 1970 Burrowsville
37°15′27″N 76°59′36″W / 37.25754°N 76.99339°W / 37.25754; -76.99339 (Brandon Plantation)
Prince George
69000241 Bremo
HABS photograph
November 11, 1971 Bremo Bluff
37°43′32″N 78°19′47″W / 37.72542°N 78.32973°W / 37.72542; -78.32973 (Bremo)
Fluvanna
69000228 Camden
1980 HABS photograph
November 11, 1971 Port Royal
38°09′48″N 77°09′41″W / 38.16324°N 77.16135°W / 38.16324; -77.16135 (Camden)
Caroline
69000249 Carter's Grove
Carter's Grove
April 15, 1970 Williamsburg
37°12′25″N 76°37′30″W / 37.20699°N 76.62500°W / 37.20699; -76.62500 (Carter's Grove)
James City
9600054 Dodona Manor
June 19, 1996 Leesburg
39°06′49″N 77°33′35″W / 39.11353°N 77.55968°W / 39.11353; -77.55968 (Dodona Manor, The Gen. George C. Marshall House)
Loudoun
69000252 Elsing Green
November 11, 1971 Tunstall
37°36′08″N 77°03′04″W / 37.60233°N 77.05120°W / 37.60233; -77.05120 (Elsing Green)
King William
66000829 Greenway Court
HABS photograph
October 9, 1960 White Post
39°02′40″N 78°07′09″W / 39.04436°N 78.11919°W / 39.04436; -78.11919 (Greenway Court)
Clarke
66000832 Gunston Hall
December 19, 1960 Lorton
38°39′51″N 77°09′37″W / 38.66404°N 77.16014°W / 38.66404; -77.16014 (Gunston Hall)
Fairfax
69000325 Kenmore
Kenmore
April 15, 1970 Fredericksburg
38°17′35″N 77°27′59″W / 38.29315°N 77.46646°W / 38.29315; -77.46646 (Kenmore)
Independent city
69000276 Menokin
November 11, 1971 Warsaw
38°00′31″N 76°48′04″W / 38.00867°N 76.80104°W / 38.00867; -76.80104 (Menokin)
Richmond Given to Francis Lightfoot Lee by John Tayloe II on the occasion of his wedding Rebecca Tayloe.
66000826 Monticello
December 19, 1960 Charlottesville
38°00′37″N 78°27′08″W / 38.01027°N 78.45231°W / 38.01027; -78.45231 (Monticello)
Albemarle Home of Thomas Jefferson
66000843 Montpelier
December 19, 1960 Orange
38°13′08″N 78°10′07″W / 38.21882°N 78.16848°W / 38.21882; -78.16848 (Montpelier)
Orange Home of James Madison
66000845 Mount Airy
October 9, 1960 Warsaw
37°58′15″N 76°47′28″W / 37.97090°N 76.79111°W / 37.97090; -76.79111 (Mount Airy)
Richmond Seat of the Tayloe Family, built by John Tayloe II decended from William Tayloe
66000833 Mount Vernon
December 19, 1960 Alexandria
38°42′28″N 77°05′10″W / 38.70790°N 77.08610°W / 38.70790; -77.08610 (Mount Vernon)
Fairfax Home of George Washington
66000842 Oak Hill
Oak Hill
December 19, 1960 Leesburg
38°59′51″N 77°37′13″W / 38.99746°N 77.62040°W / 38.99746; -77.62040 (Oak Hill)
Loudoun
69000255 Oatlands
Oatlands
November 11, 1971 Leesburg
39°02′27″N 77°37′03″W / 39.04094°N 77.61753°W / 39.04094; -77.61753 (Oatlands)
Loudoun
69000223 Poplar Forest
November 11, 1971 Lynchburg
37°20′53″N 79°15′52″W / 37.34795°N 79.26449°W / 37.34795; -79.26449 (Poplar Forest)
Bedford Secondary home of Thomas Jefferson
69000260 Prestwould
Prestwould
July 31, 2003 Clarksville
36°38′59″N 78°33′51″W / 36.64974°N 78.56425°W / 36.64974; -78.56425 (Prestwould)
Mecklenburg
69000277 Sabine Hall
HABS photograph
April 15, 1970 Tappahannock
37°56′24″N 76°47′06″W / 37.94000°N 76.78495°W / 37.94000; -76.78495 (Sabine Hall)
Richmond
70000788 Saratoga
Saratoga
November 7, 1973 Boyce
39°05′00″N 78°03′37″W / 39.08321°N 78.06022°W / 39.08321; -78.06022 (Saratoga)
Clarke
66000835 Scotchtown
HABS photograph
December 21, 1965 Ashland
37°50′40″N 77°35′10″W / 37.84449°N 77.58619°W / 37.84449; -77.58619 (Scotchtown)
Hanover
69000328 Shirley
April 15, 1970 Hopewell
37°20′31″N 77°15′40″W / 37.34190°N 77.26099°W / 37.34190; -77.26099 (Shirley Plantation)
Charles City
71000991 Spence's Point
Spence's Point
November 11, 1971 Westmoreland
38°04′51″N 76°33′01″W / 38.08092°N 76.55038°W / 38.08092; -76.55038 (Spence's Point)
Westmoreland
66000922 Sherwood Forest
July 4, 1961 Charles City
37°20′01″N 77°01′09″W / 37.33369°N 77.01910°W / 37.33369; -77.01910 (Sherwood Forest)
Charles City
66000851 Stratford Hall
October 7, 1960 Lerty
38°09′07″N 76°50′22″W / 38.15193°N 76.83944°W / 38.15193; -76.83944 (Stratford Hall)
Westmoreland
68000049 Tuckahoe
Tuckahoe Plantation
August 11, 1969 Manakin
37°34′12″N 77°39′10″W / 37.57004°N 77.65279°W / 37.57004; -77.65279 (Tuckahoe)
Goochland and Henrico
66000846 Walnut Grove
July 19, 1964 Steele's Tavern
37°55′55″N 79°12′49″W / 37.93197°N 79.21368°W / 37.93197; -79.21368 (Walnut Grove (Cyrus McCormick Farm and Workshop))
Rockbridge
66000923 Westover
October 9, 1960 Charles City
37°18′40″N 77°08′58″W / 37.31116°N 77.14950°W / 37.31116; -77.14950 (Westover)
Charles City
70000792 Woodlawn
August 5, 1998 Alexandria
38°43′03″N 77°08′15″W / 38.71746°N 77.13739°W / 38.71746; -77.13739 (Woodlawn)
Fairfax
72001389 Ampthill Cartersville Cumberland
95000245 The Anchorage Kilmarnock Northumberland
69000015 Appomattox Manor
City Point Prince George
69000267 Barboursville
Barboursville Orange
05001274 Beauregard Brandy Station Culpeper
85000984 Beaver Creek Plantation Martinsville Henry
70000823 Bel Air
Bel Air
February 26, 1970 Bel Air
38°38′26″N 77°21′46″W / 38.6405106°N 77.3628558°W / 38.6405106; -77.3628558 (Bel Air)
Prince William Home of Parson Weems
74002232 Belle Air Charles City Charles City
80004198 Belmont

Roanoke, Virginia Belmont Plantation home of acting Governor Fleming

Belmont Loudoun
73002029 Belle Grove
Port Conway King George
73002031 Belle Isle
Lancaster Lancaster
73002337 Belvoir
Fort Belvoir Fairfax
82004573 Boldrup Plantation Archeological Site Newport News Independent city
73002003 Carter Hall
Millwood Clarke
72001379 Castle Hill
Cismont Albemarle
80004195 Chericoke Falls King William
03000208 Chester Plantation Disputanta Prince George
73002211 Chesterville Plantation Site Hampton Elizabeth City
69000283 Chippokes Plantation Surry Surry
70000805 Corotoman Weems Lancaster
73002043 Criss Cross New Kent New Kent
09001222 Curles Neck Plantation Varina Henrico
70000873 Denbigh Plantation Site Newport News Independent city
82004537 Edgehill Shadwell Albemarle
06000706 Edgewood
Amherst Amherst
98000697 Edmondson Hall
June 11, 1998 Meadowview Washington
83003265 Edgewood Plantation and Harrison's Mill Charles City Charles City
07000220 Elk Hill Nellysford Nelson
08000391 Endview Plantation
Newport News Independent city
89000486 Evelynton
Charles City Charles City
72001417 Ferry Farm
Fredericksburg Stafford
04001545 Ferry Plantation House
Virginia Beach Independent city
75002030 Flowerdew Hundred Plantation Garysville Prince George
78003026 Fox Hill Plantation Lively Lancaster
82004579 Frascati Somerset Orange
66000850 George Washington Birthplace National Monument
Colonial Beach Westmoreland
78000261 Green Spring
Williamsburg James City
74002121 Hickory Hill Ashland Hanover
73001990 Highland
Charlottesville Albemarle
72001398 Howard's Neck Plantation Pemberton Goochland
72001392 Huntley
Alexandria Fairfax
84000042 Jerdone Castle Bumpass Louisa
72001401 Kingsmill Williamsburg James City
07000799 Kippax Plantation Hopewell Prince George Home of colonial planter and merchant Col. Robert Bolling
84003565 Leesylvania Dumfries Prince William
69000232 Long Branch Plantation
October 1, 1969 Millwood Clarke
66000837 Marlbourne Richmond Hanover
89001107 North Bend Plantation Weyanoke Charles City
01000146 Otterburn Bedford Bedford
85003052 Piney Grove at Southall's Plantation Holdcroft Charles City
74002116 Point of Fork Plantation Columbia, Virginia Fluvanna
83003293 Queen Hith Plantation Complex Site Newport News Independent city
77001535 Richneck Plantation Newport News Independent city
71000988 Rippon Lodge
Woodbridge Prince William
73002002 Roanoke Plantation Saxe Charlotte
07000800 Roseville Plantation Aylett King William
69000244 Rosewell
Gloucester Courthouse Gloucester
73002011 Salona McLean Fairfax
69000341 Smith's Fort Plantation
Surry Surry
80004204 Soldier's Joy
Wingina Nelson
96000579 Soldier's Rest
Berryville Clarke
03000212 Stony Creek Plantation DeWitt Dinwiddie
70000793 Sully
Chantilly Fairfax
75002040 Swann's Point Plantation Site Scotland Surry
07000053 Temple Hall Leesburg Loudoun
72001388 The Tuleyries
White Post Clarke
77001489 Varina Plantation Varina Henrico
72001505 Weston Manor Hopewell Prince George
74002104 Winton Clifford Amherst
Abingdon Arlington Arlington
Accokeek Brooke Stafford
Ampthill Richmond Independent city
Brookfield Henrico
Ash Grove
Tysons Corner Fairfax
Catalpa Culpeper Culpeper
Ceelys on the James Newport News Independent city
Chatham Manor
Fredericksburg Independent city
Chatterton Plantation King George King George County Home of John Tayloe IV, son of John Tayloe III
Chestnut Grove New Kent New Kent
Chestnut Hill Leesburg Loudoun
Chopawamsic Quantico Prince William
Clarens Alexandria Independent city
Clover Forest Plantation
Goochland Goochland
Clover Hill Culpeper Culpeper
Colross
Colross
Alexandria Independent city
Four Mile Tree
Surry Surry
Hollin Hall
Alexandria Fairfax
Hopyard Plantation Hopyard Landing
38°15′05″N 77°12′38″W / 38.251338°N 77.210618°W / 38.251338; -77.210618 (Hopyard Plantation)
King George Tayloe Family Plantation, later Powhatan Hill Plantation owned by Edward Thornton Tayloe
Hope Park
Fairfax Fairfax
Lexington Mason Neck Fairfax
Locust Hill Leesburg Loudoun
Martin's Hundred Kingsmill James City
Merchant's Hope
Hopewell Prince George
Mount Brilliant Farrington Hanover
Mount Eagle
Alexandria Fairfax
Oaken Brow Plantation King George King George County Home of Charles Tayloe, son of John Tayloe III
Okeley Manor Alexandria Fairfax
Ossian Hall
Annandale Fairfax
Pampatike Manquin King William
Raspberry Plain
Leesburg Loudoun
Ravensworth
Annandale Fairfax
Selma Leesburg Loudoun
Shadwell Shadwell Albemarle
Sharswood Gretna Pittsylvania Home of Charles Edwin Miller and Nathaniel Crenshaw Miller
Smithfield
Fredericksburg Spotsylvania
Strawberry Vale Manor
Tysons Corner Fairfax
Towlston Grange Great Falls Fairfax
Vaucluse
Alexandria Independent city
White House
White House New Kent
Woodbridge Woodbridge Prince William

HUTTON PLANTATION [1]

Edmondson hall - Washington co.

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  • Slavery - Crash Course US History #13
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Transcription

Episode 13 – Slavery Hi, I’m John Green. This is Crashcourse U.S. history and today we’re gonna to talk about slavery, which is not funny. Yeah, so we put a lei on the eagle to try to cheer you up, but, let’s face it, this is going to be depressing. With slavery, every time you think, like, “Oh, it couldn’t have been that bad,” it turns out to have been much worse. Mr. Green, Mr. Green, but what about-- Yeah, Me from the Past, I’m gonna stop you right there because you’re going to embarrass yourself. Slavery was hugely important to America. I mean, it led to a civil war. And it also lasted what at least in U.S. history counts as a long ass time—from 1619 to 1865 And, yes, I know there’s a 1,200 year old church in your neighborhood in Denmark, but we’re not talking about Denmark! But slavery is most important because we still struggle with its legacy. So, yes, today’s episode will probably not be funny. But it will be important. INTRO So, the slave-based economy in the South is sometimes characterized as having been separate from the market revolution, but that’s not really the case. Without southern cotton, the north wouldn’t have been able to industrialize, at least not as quickly, because cotton textiles were one of the first industrially produced products and the most important commodity in world trade by the 19th century. And ¾ of the world’s cotton came from the American South. And, speaking of cotton, why has no one mentioned to me that my collar has been half-popped this entire episode, like I’m trying to recreate the flying nun’s hat? And although there were increasingly fewer slaves in the North as northern states outlawed slavery, cotton shipments overseas made Northern merchants rich, northern bankers financed the purchase of land for plantations. Northern insurance companies insured slaves, who were, after all considered property and very valuable property. And, in addition to turning cotton into cloth for sale overseas, northern manufacturers sold cloth back to the south where it was used to clothe the very slaves who had cultivated it. But certainly the most prominent effects of the slave-based economy were seen in the South. The profitability of slave-based agriculture, especially “King Cotton,” meant that the south would remain largely agricultural and rural. Slave states were home to a few cities, like St. Louis and Baltimore, but with the exception of New Orleans, almost all southern urbanization took place in the Upper South, further away from the large cotton plantations. And slave-based agriculture was so profitable that it siphoned money away from other economic endeavors. Like, there was very little industry in the South – it produced only 10% of the nation’s manufactured goods, and as most of the capital was being plowed into the purchase of slaves, there was very little room for technological innovation like, for instance, railroads. This lack of industry and railroads would eventually make the south suck at the civil war, thankfully. In short, slavery dominated the south, shaping it both economically and culturally. And, slavery wasn’t a minor aspect of American society. By 1860, there were 4 million slaves in the U.S., and in the South, they made up 1/3 of the total population. Although in the popular imagination, most plantations were these sprawling affairs with hundreds of slaves, in reality the majority of slave-holders owned five or fewer slaves. And of course, most white people in the south owned no slaves at all, although if they could afford to, they would sometimes rent slaves to help with their work. These were the so-called “yeoman” farmers who lived self-sufficiently, raised their own food and purchased very little in the market economy. They worked the poorest land and as a result were mostly pretty poor themselves. But even they largely supported slavery, partly perhaps for aspirational reasons and partly because the racism inherent to the system gave even the poorest whites legal and social status. And southern intellectuals worked hard to encourage these ideas of white solidarity and to make the case for slavery. Many of the founders, a bunch of whom you’ll remember held slaves, saw slavery as a necessary evil. Jefferson once wrote, “As it is, we have the wolf by the ear, and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and self-preservation in the other.” The belief that justice and self-preservation couldn’t sit on the same side of the scale was really opposed the American idea and, in the end, it would make the civil war inevitable. But as slavery became more entrenched – and as ideas of liberty and political equality were embraced by more people – some Southerners began to make the case that slavery wasn’t just a necessary evil. They argued, for instance, that slaves benefited from slavery. Because, you know, their masters fed them and clothed them and took care of them in their old age. You still hear this argument today, astonishingly. In fact, you’ll probably see asshats in the comments saying that. I will remind you, it’s not cursing if you are referring to an actual ass. This paternalism allowed masters to see themselves as benevolent, and to contrast their family oriented slavery with the cold mercenary capitalism of the free labor north. So, yeah, in the face of rising criticism of slavery, some Southerners began to argue that the institution was actually good for the social order. One of the best-known proponents of this view was John C. Calhoun who, in 1837 said this in a speech on the Senate floor: “I hold that in the present state of civilization, where two races of different origin, and distinguished by color, and other physical differences, as well as intellectual, are brought together, the relation now existing in the slaveholding States between the two, is, instead of an evil, a good — a positive good.” John: Now, of course, John C. Calhoun was a fringe politician and nobody took his views particularly seriously … Stan: Well, he was secretary of state from 1844 to 1845. John: Well, I mean, who really cares about the Secretary of State, Stan … Danica: Ehh, also Secretary of War from 1817 to 1825. John: Alright, but we don’t even have a Secretary of War anymore. Meredith: And he was Vice President from 1825 to 1832. John: Oh my God, were we insane? We were, of course. But we justified the insanity—with biblical passages and with the examples of the Greeks and Romans and with outright racism, arguing that black people were inherently inferior to whites and that NOT to keep them in slavery would upset the natural order of things, a worldview popularized millennia ago by my nemesis, Aristotle. God, I hate Aristotle. You know what defenders of Aristotle always say? He was the first person to identify dolphins. Well, okay. Dolphin-identifier. Yes, that is what he should be remembered for, but he’s a terrible philosopher. Here’s the truth about slavery: It was coerced labor that relied upon intimidation and brutality and dehumanization. And this wasn’t just a cultural system, it was a legal one. I mean, Louisiana law proclaimed that a slave “owes his master…a respect without bounds, and an absolute obedience.” The signal feature of slaves’ lives was work. I mean, conditions and tasks varied, but all slaves labored, usually from sunup to sundown, and almost always without any pay. Most slaves worked in agriculture on plantations and conditions were different depending on which crops were grown. Like, slaves on the rice plantations of South Carolina had terrible working conditions but they labored under the task system, which meant that once they had completed their allotted daily work, they would have time to do other things. But lest you imagine this as like how we have work and leisure time, bear in mind that they were owned and treated as property. On cotton plantations, most slaves worked in gangs, usually under the control of an overseer or another slave who was called a driver. This was backbreaking work done in the southern sun and humidity and so it’s not surprising that whippings or the threat of them were often necessary to get slaves to work. It’s easy enough to talk about the brutality of slave discipline, but it can be difficult to internalize it. Like, you look at these pictures, but because you’ve seen them over and over again, they don’t have the power they once might have. The pictures can tell a story about cruelty, but they don’t necessarily communicate how arbitrary it all was. As for example in this story told by a woman who was a slave as a young girl. “[The] overseer … went to my father one morning and said, “Bob, I’m gonna whip you this morning.” Daddy said, “I ain’t done nothing,” and he said “I know it, I’m going to whip you to keep you from doing nothing,” and he hit him with that cowhide – you know it would cut the blood out of you with every lick if they hit you hard.” That brutality – the whippings, the brandings, the rape – was real and it was intentional because in order for slavery to function, slaves had to be dehumanized. This enabled slaveholders to rationalize what they were doing and, it was hoped, to reduce slaves to the animal property that is implied by the term “chattel slavery.” So the idea was that slaveholders wouldn’t think of their slaves as human. And slaves wouldn’t think of themselves as human. But, it didn’t work. But more importantly, slaveowners were never able to convince the slaves themselves that they were anything less than human. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble. Slaves resistance to their dehumanization took many forms, but the primary way was by forming families. Family was a refuge for slaves and a source of dignity that masters recognized and sought to stifle. A paternalistic slaveowner named Bennett H. Barrow wrote in his rules for the Highland Plantation: “No rule that I have stated is of more importance than that relating to Negroes marrying outside of the plantation … It creates a feeling of independence.” Most slaves did marry, usually for life, and when possible, slaves grew up in two-parent households. Single parent households were common, though, as a result of one parent being sold. In the Upper South, where the economy was shifting from tobacco to different, less labor-intensive cash crops, the sale of slaves was common. Perhaps 1/3 of slave marriages in states like Virginia were broken up by sale. Religion was also an important part of life in slavery. While masters wanted their slaves to learn the parts of the Bible that talked about being happy in bondage, slave worship tended to focus on the stories of Exodus, where Moses brought the slaves out of bondage, or Biblical heroes who overcame great odds, like Daniel and David. And although most slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write, many did anyway, and some became preachers. Slave preachers were often very charismatic leaders, and they roused the suspicion of slave owners, and not without reason. Two of the most important slave uprisings in the south were led by preachers. Thanks, Thought Bubble. Oh, it’s time for the Mystery Document? We’re doing two set pieces in a row? Alright...The rules here are simple. I wanted to reshoot that, but Stan said no. I guess the author of the Mystery Document. If I am wrong, I get shocked with the shock pen. “Since I have been in the Queen’s dominions I have been well contented, Yes well contented for Sure, man is as God intended he should be. That is, all are born free and equal. This is a wholesome law, not like the Southern laws which puts man made in the image of God on level with brutes. O, what will become of the people, and where will they stand in the day of Judgment. Would that the 5th verse of the 3rd chapter of Malachi were written as with a bar of iron, and the point of a diamond upon every oppressor’s heart that they might repent of this evil, and let the oppressed go free…” Alright, it’s definitely a preacher, because only preachers have read Malachi. Probably African American. Probably not someone from the south. I’m going to guess that it is Richard Allen, the founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church? Dang it! It’s Joseph Taper? And Stan just pointed out to me that I should have known it was Joseph Taper because it starts out, “Since I have been in the Queen’s dominions.” He was in Canada. He escaped slavery to Canada. The Queen’s dominions! Alright, Canadians, I blame you for this. Although thank you for abolishing slavery decades before we did. AH! So the mystery document shows one of the primary ways that slaves resisted their oppression: by running away. Although some slaves, like Joseph Taper, escaped slavery for good by running away to Northern free states or even to Canada where they wouldn’t have to worry about fugitive slave laws, even more slaves ran away temporarily, hiding out in the woods or the swamps and eventually returning. No one knows exactly how many slaves escaped to freedom, but the best estimate is that 1,000 or so a year made the journey northwards. Most fugitive slaves were young men, but the most famous runaway has been hanging out behind me all day long, Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman escaped to Philadelphia at the age of 29 and over the course of her life she made about 20 trips back to Maryland to help friends and relatives make the journey north on the Underground Railroad. But a most dramatic form of resistance to slavery was actual armed rebellion, which was attempted. Now individuals sometimes took matters into their own hands and beat or sometimes even killed their white overseers or masters, like “Bob,” the guy who received the arbitrary beating, responded to it by killing his overseer with a hoe. But that said, large-scale slave uprisings were relatively rare. The four most famous ones all took place in a 35 year period at the beginning of the 19th century. Gabriel’s rebellion in 1800, which we talked about before, was discovered before he was able to carry out his plot. Then, in 1811 a group of slaves upriver from New Orleans seized cane knives and guns and marched on the city before militia stopped them. And, in 1822 Denmark Vesey, a former slave who had purchased his freedom may have organized a plot to destroy Charleston, South Carolina. I say may have because the evidence against him is disputed and comes from a trial that was not fair. But, regardless, the end result of that trial is that he was executed as were 34 slaves. But, the most successful slave rebellion, at least in the sense that they actually killed some people, was Nat Turner’s in August 1831. Turner, was a preacher and with a group of about 80 slaves, he marched from farm to farm in Southampton County Virginia killing the inhabitants, most of whom were women and children because the men were attending a religious revival meeting in North Carolina. Turner and 17 other rebels were captured and executed, but not before they struck terror into the hearts of whites all across the American south. Virginia’s response was to make slavery worse, passing even harsher laws that forbade slaves from preaching and prohibited teaching them to read. Other slave states followed Virginia’s lead and by the 1830s, slavery had grown if anything more harsh. So this shows that large-scale armed resistance was, Django Unchained aside, not just suicidal but also a threat to loved ones, and really to all slaves. But it is hugely important to emphasize that slaves DID resist their oppression. Sometimes this meant taking up arms, but usually it meant more subtle forms of resistance, like intentional work slowdowns, or sabotaging equipment, or pretending not to understand instructions. And, most importantly, in the face of systematic, legal, and cultural degradation they reaffirmed their humanity through family and through faith. Why is this so important? Because too often in America we still talk about slaves as if they failed to rise up, when in fact rising up would not have made life better for them or for their families. The truth is, sometimes carving out an identity as a human being in a social order that is constantly seeking to dehumanize you is the most powerful form of resistance. Refusing to become the chattel that their masters believed them to be is what made slavery untenable, and the Civil War inevitable. So make no mistake: Slaves fought back. And in the end, they won. I’ll see you next week. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller. The script supervisor is Meredith Danko. Our associate producer is Danica Johnson. The show is written by my high school history teacher, Raoul Meyer, and myself. And our graphics team is Thought Café. Every week, there’s a new caption to the libertage, but today’s episode was so sad that we couldn’t fit a libertage in UNTIL NOW. Suggest libertage captions in comments where you can also ask questions about today’s video that will be answered by our team of historians. Thanks for watching Crash Course, and as we say in my hometown, don’t forget to be abolitionist. CCUS 13 -

See also

References

  1. ^ "How to Apply the National Register Criteria for Evaluation Archived 2013-12-04 at the Wayback Machine," (PDF), National Register Bulletins, National Park Service. Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  2. ^ National Park Service (April 2007). "National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-09. Retrieved 2007-05-20.
  3. ^ National Park Service. "National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database". Archived from the original on 2004-06-06. Retrieved 2007-08-14.
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