The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History
On September 9, 1739, a group of about twenty enslaved Africans gathered near the Stono River in South Carolina, twenty miles from Charleston. Led by a man named Jemmy — possibly from the Kingdom of Kongo — they raided a store, seized guns and powder, and marched south toward Spanish Florida, recruiting dozens more along the way. Their banner was a flag; their drumbeat, a call to freedom. By sunset, over sixty people lay dead — white and Black — and the rebellion had become the largest slave uprising in British mainland North America. This episode follows the Stono Rebellion from its spark at the Stono Bridge to its bloody suppression, and examines the aftermath: a brutal new slave code, harsher restrictions, and a century of fear that shaped the plantation South. We also explore the rebels' likely Kongolese Catholic background, the Spanish promise of freedom in Florida, and how the rebellion's memory was deliberately buried. Lucas and Luna unpack a revolt that dared to imagine liberty in a land built on chains. #StonoRebellion #1739 #SouthCarolina #Jemmy #Kongolese #SlaveRevolt #NegroAct1740 #SpanishFlorida #GullahGeechee #ColonialAmerica #AtlanticSlaveTrade #Resistance #Chattahoochee #FortMose #Baptiste #History #FexingoHistory #AmericanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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