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  1. Jamaica in 1717. Queen Nanny, Granny Nanny, or Nanny of the Maroons ONH (c. 1686 – c. 1760), was an early-18th-century freedom fighter and leader of the Jamaican Maroons. She led a community of formerly-enslaved escapee slaves, the majority of them West African in descent, called the Windward Maroons, along with their children and families. [1]

  2. Aug 17, 2021 · Named after the man who led the rebellion, one of his collaborators was Nanny Grigg, an enslaved woman who worked in the house and had taught herself to read. Bussa, who was African-born (possibly from modern-day Nigeria), led around 400 rebels, both male and female.

  3. For six years from 1728, the British fought Nanny and her forces. Using cannon, they captured Nanny Town, and in 1734, Captain Stoddard, the British commander, reported that ‘all the maroons had been killed’. There were in fact, survivors- the British pursued them and destroyed all the crops in the region.

  4. Nanny trained her maroon warriors in the art of guerilla warfare. It is also said that she was a great obeah woman and worked magic to protect her warriors from their British enemies. The British fought Nanny and her maroon troops from 1728 to 1734.

  5. Jul 1, 1973 · Jonathan GathorneHardy, in his entertaining and original study of one of their more successful solutions to the problem of offspring, begins his history of the nanny with a brief survey of past...

  6. Oct 22, 2020 · Its namesake is Queen Nanny, an eighteenth-century West African woman who not only escaped slavery herself but raised a fearsome army known as the Maroons, freeing other enslaved Africans and waging a guerrilla war against British colonisers.

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  8. Feb 3, 2013 · Although there are no direct, overt historical references, it is clear that the poem is about a real person who existed in the history of Jamaica. She is known as Nanny Queen of the Maroons, and...

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