The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History

The 1817 Negro Fort Massacre: America's Largest Slave Revolt Plot

6 min · 1. juli 2026
episode The 1817 Negro Fort Massacre: America's Largest Slave Revolt Plot cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the little-known story of the Negro Fort, a British-built fortress in Spanish Florida that became a refuge for hundreds of escaped slaves and a beacon of freedom. After the War of 1812, the U.S. military, led by General Andrew Jackson, targeted the fort as a threat to the southern slave system. In July 1816, a U.S. gunboat fired a heated shot that detonated the fort's magazine, killing most of its inhabitants. We discuss the fort's origins, the alliance between fugitive slaves and Seminole Indians, the controversial role of the 'Maroon' communities, and how this event foreshadowed the Seminole Wars and Jackson's later presidency. We also touch on the broader context of slave resistance in the borderlands and the brutal lengths to which the U.S. government went to suppress it. #NegroFort #AndrewJackson #SeminoleWars #Maroons #SpanishFlorida #WarOf1812 #SlaveRevolt #ProspectBluff #ApalachicolaRiver #FortGadsden #RunawaySlaves #SeminoleAlliance #BlackSeminoles #USMilitaryHistory #19thCentury #AmericanHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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145 episodes

episode The 1792 Danish Ban: Europe's First Slave Trade Abolition artwork

The 1792 Danish Ban: Europe's First Slave Trade Abolition

In 1792, Denmark-Norway became the first European power to outlaw the transatlantic slave trade — but the ban didn't take effect for a decade. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore why Denmark acted so early, what the 1792 edict actually said, and how the Danish colony of Saint Croix became a laboratory for abolition. They trace the role of the Danish government, the abolitionist influence of figures like Ernst Schimmelmann and Christian VII, and the surprising economic calculations behind the ban. The conversation also covers the 1848 emancipation in the Danish West Indies, the rebellion that forced it, and the legacy of Danish colonialism in the Caribbean. Specific names and terms include: Christian VII, Ernst Schimmelmann, Frederik VI, Saint Croix, Saint Thomas, Saint John, Danish West Indies, Governor Peter von Scholten, 1848 emancipation, 1733 slave revolt, Danish Guinea Company, and the 1792 Slave Trade Commission. #History #FexingoHistory #AtlanticSlaveTrade #DanishWestIndies #1792DanishBan #ChristianVII #ErnstSchimmelmann #PeterVonScholten #SaintCroix #DanishAbolition #SlaveTradeCommission #1848Emancipation #CaribbeanHistory #Abolition #EuropeanColonialism #SlaveRevolt #DanishGuineaCompany #1733Revolt Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8. juli 20267 min
episode Cuban Cimarrones: Maroon Communities of the Slave Era artwork

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Yesterday7 min
episode The 1838 Brazilian Quilombo of Manoel Congo artwork

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Yesterday6 min
episode The Abolitionist Who Infiltrated a Slave Ship: James Field Stanfield artwork

The Abolitionist Who Infiltrated a Slave Ship: James Field Stanfield

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6. juli 202611 min
episode The Middle Passage: Below Decks on a Slave Ship artwork

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