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      • In 1822, Denmark Vesey was found guilty of plotting an insurrection—what would have been the biggest slave uprising in U.S. history. A free man of color, he was hanged along with 34 other African Americans in Charleston, South Carolina, in what historians agree was probably the largest civil execution in U.S. history.
      oaks.kent.edu/abolitionism/denmark-veseys-revolt-slave-plot-lit-fuse-fort-sumter
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  2. Denmark Vesey, self-educated Black man who in 1822 planned the most extensive slave rebellion in U.S. history. The revolt, which was to take place in Charleston, South Carolina, was thwarted after a house servant informed white authorities. Vesey was subsequently hanged.

    • Nikki Haley

      Nikki Haley (born January 20, 1972, Bamberg, South Carolina,...

  3. On October 7, 1822, Judge Elihu Bay convicted four white men for a misdemeanor in inciting slaves to insurrection during the Denmark Vesey slave conspiracy. These four white men were William Allen, John Igneshias, Andrew S. Rhodes, and Jacob Danders. The men were sentenced to varied fines and reasonably short jail time.

    • Early Years
    • Liberation Theology
    • The Plot For Freedom
    • Arrests and Executions
    • Sources

    Enslaved from birth Denmark Vesey (given name: Telemaque) spent his childhood in St. Thomas. When Vesey was a teen, he was sold by a trader of enslaved people Captain Joseph Vesey and sent to a planter in present-day Haiti. Captain Vesey intended to leave the boy there for good, but ultimately had to return for him after the planter reported that t...

    In 1816 or 1817, Vesey joined the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a religious denomination formed by Black Methodists after facing racism from White churchgoers. In Charleston, Vesey was one of an estimated 4,000 Black people to start an African A.M.E. church. He formerly attended the White-led Second Presbyterian Church, where enslaved Black c...

    Vesey was determined to take down the institution of enslavement. In 1822, he teamed up with Angolan mystic Jack Purcell, ship-carpenter Peter Poyas, church leaders, and others to plot what would have been the largest revolt of enslaved people in US history. Known as a conjurer who understood the supernatural world, Purcell, also called “Gullah Jac...

    Bennett, Vesey, and Gullah Jack were among the 131 men arrested for conspiracy in connection to the insurrection plot. Of those arrested, 67 were convicted. Vesey defended himself during the trial but was hanged along with about 35 others, including Jack, Poyas, and Bennett. Although Wilson won his freedom due to his loyalty to his enslaver, he did...

    Bennett, James. “A Distaste for the Memory of the Tale.” TheAtlantic.com, 30 June, 2015.
    “Denmark Vesey.” National Park Service, 9 May, 2018.
    Higginson, Thomas Wentworth. “The Story of Denmark Vesey.” The Atlantic Monthly, June, 1861.
    “This Far by Faith: Denmark Vesey.” PBS.org, 2003.
    • Nadra Kareem Nittle
  4. Mar 15, 2017 · Though the rebellion never actually happened — a slave spilled the beans about it to authorities before it could happen — Vesey and 34 slaves, including some from the household of the state’s...

  5. Jun 16, 2023 · On June 16, 1822, a small group of slaves foiled Denmark Vesey's planned uprising by telling their masters about the plot to free thousands.

  6. Feb 21, 2002 · At a conference on Denmark Vesey in Charleston in March 2001, Johnson presented new evidence demonstrating that Vesey did not organize a rebellion of Charleston’s slaves back in 1822.

  7. Jul 19, 2022 · Statue of Denmark Vesey at Hampton Park in Charleston, S.C. Formerly enslaved, Vesey bought his freedom with money he was allowed to earn and winnings from a lottery ticket, and he planned an...