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

The 1739 Stono Rebellion: South Carolina's Bloodiest Slave Revolt

9 min · 3 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The 1739 Stono Rebellion: South Carolina's Bloodiest Slave Revolt

Descripción

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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Portada del episodio The Abolitionist Who Infiltrated a Slave Ship: James Field Stanfield

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Portada del episodio The Middle Passage: Below Decks on a Slave Ship

The Middle Passage: Below Decks on a Slave Ship

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Portada del episodio The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty

The 1781 Zong Massacre: Insurance Fraud and the Calculus of Cruelty

In this episode of The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering, Lucas and Luna examine the 1781 Zong massacre — not as a random act of brutality but as a cold insurance calculation. The slave ship Zong, overcrowded and off-course, saw 133 enslaved Africans thrown alive into the sea so that the ship's owners could claim insurance for 'lost cargo.' When the case reached London courts, Lord Mansfield ruled on property law, not murder. Lucas unpacks the voyage's chronology: Captain Luke Collingwood's decision, the crew's testimony, the legal arguments over jettison and 'perils of the sea.' He connects the Zong to the growing British abolition movement, explaining how Granville Sharp used the case to galvanise public outrage. The episode explores the specific legal doctrine of 'general average' as applied to enslaved people, and how this atrocity, stripped of euphemism, became a rallying cry for abolitionists like Equiano and Clarkson. Listeners will learn about the Gregson v. Gilbert insurance case, the role of the Liverpool slave trade syndicates, and the grisly arithmetic that priced human life at thirty pounds per head. #ZongMassacre #SlaveShipZong #LukeCollingwood #GranvilleSharp #LordMansfield #GeneralAverage #InsuranceFraud #AtlanticSlaveTrade #AbolitionMovement #MiddlePassage #LiverpoolSlaveTrade #GregsonvGilbert #OlaudahEquiano #ThomasClarkson #1781 #History #FexingoHistory #PowerfulHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio The Man Who Sank the Atlantic Slave Trade: Granville Sharp

The Man Who Sank the Atlantic Slave Trade: Granville Sharp

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Portada del episodio The Slave Ship Creole: 1841 Coastwise Revolt and Freedom

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In November 1841, the American slave ship Creole departed Richmond, Virginia, bound for New Orleans with 135 enslaved people aboard. Off the coast of North Carolina, 19 captives led by Madison Washington — who had escaped to Canada only to be recaptured — seized control of the brig, killing one crewman and forcing the captain to sail to Nassau in the Bahamas. British authorities in Nassau, operating under the 1833 Emancipation Act, refused American demands for the return of the 128 people who gained freedom. The incident ignited a diplomatic crisis between the United States and Britain, inflamed sectional tensions over slavery and maritime law, and became a rallying point for abolitionists like Frederick Douglass, who later called the Creole affair 'a victory for the oppressed.' This episode explores the rebellion itself, the legal battle over the enslaved refugees, and the lasting impact on US-British relations and the domestic slavery debate. We also discuss how the revolt challenged the delicate balance of power between slave and free states in the antebellum era. #CreoleRebellion #MadisonWashington #1841 #SlaveRevolt #Nassau #Bahamas #CoastwiseSlaveTrade #AmericanSlavery #Abolition #FrederickDouglass #USBritainRelations #WebsterAshburton #Antebellum #MaritimeHistory #SlaveShip #BlackResistance #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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