Read American Uprising Online

Authors: Daniel Rasmussen

American Uprising (18 page)

BOOK: American Uprising
10.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Prologue

1 “Though the cause . . . is strong”: Lowell,
Poetical Works
, 68.

2 a mere twenty-four pages: Paquette, “The Great Louisiana Slave Revolt.”

1. Carnival in New Orleans

9 “The river . . . for empire”: Barry,
Rising Tide
, 97.

10 Down from the mountains . . . to New Orleans: Barry,
Rising Tide
, 38–39.

10 prime entrepot: Meinig,
The Shaping of America
, 15–16.

10 “the produce . . . to market”: Greeley,
American Conflict
, 55.

10 Magnolias, orange trees . . . columned porticoes: Crété,
Daily Life in Louisiana
, 253.

11 “The social status . . . ‘good natured’ ”: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 61.

12 The roads . . . games in the field: Crété,
Daily Life in Louisiana
, 97.

12 “most active . . . the country”: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 53–54.

12 small talk and gossip: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 20.

12 unparalleled in the United States: Sitterson,
Sugar Country
, 45.

13 Every year . . . alcohol: Crété,
Daily Life in Louisiana
, 204–5.

13 “You never saw anything more brilliant”: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 86.

13 Slaves brought in . . . the next morning: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 81.

13 almost entirely to dancing and gambling: Kinser,
Carnival, American Style
, 22.

14 As early as the 1740s . . . to dance: Kinser,
Carnival, American Style
, 17, 59.

14 Jean Noël Destrehan’s relatives . . . as a sugar planter: Harvey, Roger, and D’Oliveira,
To Reach Afar
, 2–3, 32.

15 “Those who have . . . annual expences”: Sitterson,
Sugar Country
, 158.

16 “We could not imagine . . . opulence and luxury”: Gayarré,
History of Louisiana
, 4:59.

17 Awakening at sunrise . . . refresh him: Stedman,
Stedman’s Surinam
, 104.

17 “was there . . . in the back”: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 61.

17 “cultivation must cease . . . demolished habitations”: Gayarré,
History of Louisiana
, 4:62.

17 75 percent: Yoes
, Louisiana’s German Coast
, 72.

17 close to 90 percent: Rothman,
Slave Country
, 108; Conrad,
German Coast
, 108.

18 “To the necessity . . . to whites”: Gayarré,
History of Louisiana
, 4:62.

2. Paths to Slavery

19 African and African-descended slaves . . . along the riverbank: Latrobe,
Impressions Respecting New Orleans
, 21–22.

20 The participants . . . the drummers: Latrobe,
Impressions Respecting New Orleans
, 50.

20 rocked the Crescent City: Sublette,
The World That Made New Orleans
, 3.

21 The men . . . the celebrants: Kinser,
Carnival, American Style
, 36, 41.

21 leaders had been chiefs or kings in Africa: Childs,
1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba
, 117.

21 “He wags his head . . . upon the multitude”: Kinser,
Carnival, American Style
, 35.

22 Their names . . . with the ocean: Summer Institute of Linguistics Aukan–English Dictionary; Bartle, “Forty Days.”

22 The Asante kingdom controlled . . . from birth”: Fynn,
Asante and Its Neighbours
, 1–4, 32–33.

22 born around 1790: American Uprising Slave Database. Conrad,
German Coast
; Thrasher,
On to New Orleans!

23 In the Lower Guinea . . . King Jose I: Thornton, “African Soldiers in the Haitian Revolution.”

23 ten separate slave ships . . . from Charleston, South Carolina: Leglaunec, “Slave Migrations.”

23 From about 1770 . . . the Windward Coast: Leglaunec, “Slave Migrations.”

24 Some slaves might have . . . baptized elsewhere: Leglaunec, “Slave Migrations.”

24 Forty percent . . . fourth year of labor: Miller,
Way of Death
, 440–41.

25 records suggest he was actually born in South Carolina: Carretta,
Equiano, the African
.

25 By his telling, Equiano . . . animal skins: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 20–23.

26 “We are almost” . . . golden jewelry as well: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 22.

26 Every man, woman, and child . . . their plantings and harvestings: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 26.

27 One day . . . “with our tears”: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 32.

27 “My surprise” . . . terrified: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 39–41.

28 “I was now . . . loose hair”: Equiano/Sollors,
Gustavus Vassa
, 39–41.

28 Some slaves choked . . . and died: Harms,
The Diligent
, 252.

28 The slave traders brought . . . new oppressions: Harms,
The Diligent
, 253.

29 The captain . . . ran high: Harms,
The Diligent
, 261, 267.

29 The crew . . . their destination: Harms,
The Diligent
, 268.

30 “to teach a lesson to all the others”: Harms,
The Diligent
, 270.

30 “It was usual . . . among one another”: Harms,
The Diligent
, 297–98.

31 Prior to their arrival . . . before sale: Kiple,
The Caribbean Slave
, 57.

32 William Kenner . . . merchant firm: Kane,
Plantation Parade
, 25–26.

32 a full-service business: Smith and Smith,
Cane, Cotton & Crevasses
, 26.

32 Brown had . . . for sugar production: Sitterson,
Sugar Country
, 23.

32 “towering . . . exceedingly unpopular”: “Memoirs of Micah Taul,” in W. C. C. Claiborne,
Interim Appointment
, 264.

33 The slaves tried to imagine . . . walking sticks: W. Johnson,
Soul by Soul
, 165–66.

34 Joseph the Spaniard: St. Charles Parish,
Original Acts
, hereafter cited as Denunciations.

34 “While furnishing . . . have resulted”: Sublette,
The World That Made New Orleans
, 88.

35 “Nothing is more dreaded . . . plot their rebellions”: Sublette,
The World That Made New Orleans
, 73.

35 In fact . . . declaring war: Thornton, “African Dimensions of the Stono Rebellion,” 1112.

35 In 1812 . . . “but dead”: Childs,
1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba
, 123.

36 “headmen” . . . “primal powers of thunder and lightening”: Linebaugh and Rediker,
The Many-Headed Hydra
, 184–85.

3. A Revolutionary Forge

39 123 million pounds . . . and rum: James
, The Black Jacobins
, 45.

40 The island accounted for . . . refined goods: James,
The Black Jacobins
, 48–49.

41 “How can we make . . . men and animals”: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 93.

42 “One has to hear . . . surrounds him”: James,
The Black Jacobins
, 18.

42 “
Eh! Eh!
. . . this vow”: James,
The Black Jacobins
, 18.

42 On the night . . . “spread like a torrent”: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 94.

43 “strange eyes . . . hearts of all of us”: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 100.

43 In the first eight . . . 80,000: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 113.

44 “There is a motor . . . come to know”: Pierre Mossut to Marquis de Gallifet, September 19, 1791 (Archives Nationales, 107 AP 128), in Dubois and Garrigus,
Slave Revolution in the Caribbean
, 94.

44 In control of France . . . 42,000 battle-hardened men: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 251, 260.

45 “war of extermination”: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 290.

45 “ignorant of color prejudice”: Dubois,
Avengers of the New World
, 292–93.

45 Over 80 percent: Paul Lachance, “Repercussions of the Haitian Revolution in Louisiana,” in Geggus,
Impact of the Haitian Revolution
, 210.

46 “Let us imitate . . . territory of liberty”: Jean-Jacques Dessalines, “The Haitian Declaration of Independence,” in Dubois and Garrigus,
Slave Revolution in the Caribbean
, 188–91.

46 In 1789 . . . only 9,000: Paul Lachance, “Repercussions of the Haitian Revolution in Louisiana,” in Geggus,
Impact of the Haitian Revolution
, 211.

46 “Damn sugar, damn coffee, damn colonies”: Robert Paquette, “Revolutionary Saint Domingue in the Making of Territorial Louisiana,” in Gaspar and Geggus,
A Turbulent Time
, 209.

47 41 percent of the North American continent: Barry,
Rising Tide
, 21.

47 By 1802 . . . sugar per year: Paul Lachance, “Repercussions of the Haitian Revolution in Louisiana,” in Geggus,
Impact of the Haitian Revolution
, 211.

48 As Americans and Europeans . . . raw sugar: Mintz,
Sweetness and Power
, 120.

48 In a few short years . . . revolved around sugar: Berlin,
Many Thousands Gone
, 199, 325.

4. Empire’s Emissary

52 “We have lived long . . . first rank”: Geer,
The Louisiana Purchase
, 197.

53 “puny force . . . subject for ridicule”: Young, “The United States Army in the South,” 99, 105.

53 “The prejudices . . . American”:
Orleans Gazette for the Country
, June 6, 1811.

53 devoted to a single, slave-made staple crop: Berlin,
Many Thousands Gone
, 325.

53 “guide the rising generation . . . virtue”: Hatfield,
William Claiborne
, 112.

54 “glowing colours”: N. H. Claiborne,
Notes on the War
, 92.

54 “do nothings” . . . “American liberty”: Hatfield,
William Claiborne
, 4.

54 “Dear my country . . . my country”: N. H. Claiborne,
Notes on the War
, 93.

54 imperial colony of alien people: Meinig,
The Shaping of America
, 15.

55. “The very trees . . . first proprietors”: N. H. Claiborne,
Notes on the War
, 102.

55 “This would not sweeten . . . as well as theirs”: Meinig,
The Shaping of America
, 15.

55 “All Louisianians are Frenchmen at heart”: de Laussat,
Memoirs of My Life
, 18.

55
chacas
,
catchoupines
,
catchumas
, and
kaintucks
: Crété,
Daily Life in Louisiana
, 70.

55 When Claiborne arrived . . . meant to be American: Hatfield,
William Claiborne
, 114.

56 “mischiefs . . . every other passion”: Hatfield,
William Claiborne
, 120.

56 “Hail Columbia” . . . “attended my administration”: Kinser,
Carnival, American Style
, 29.

57 “the insignificant part he acted in the circle”: Hatfield,
William Claiborne
, 153–154.

BOOK: American Uprising
10.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Ominous Parallels by Leonard Peikoff
Snake Eater by William G. Tapply
Wallace of the Secret Service by Alexander Wilson
Sandokán by Emilio Salgari
Torn From the Shadows by Yolanda Sfetsos
Wave Warrior by Lesley Choyce
Unraveled by Her by Wendy Leigh
Dark Warrior by Donna Fletcher