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Topic: Slave Rebellions in America- The New York Slave Revolt Of 1712, The Black Seminole Slave Rebellion, and The Creole Rebellion I.                Introduction: Resistance as a Response to Enslavement A.    Enslaved Afric

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Research Paper Outline and Bibliography

Topic: Slave Rebellions in America- The New York Slave Revolt Of 1712, The Black Seminole Slave Rebellion, and The Creole Rebellion

I.                Introduction: Resistance as a Response to Enslavement

A.    Enslaved African Americans in North America engaged in acts of resistance to their oppression, including revolts (Harris, 2024).

B.    The 18th and 19th century saw a few important revolts against slavery.

C.    To demonstrate varieties of resistance and their historical implications, this outline discusses three major uprisings—the New York Slave Revolt of 1712, the Black Seminole Slave Rebellion, and the Creole Rebellion (Huston, 2019).

II.             The New York Slave Revolt of 1712

A.    Background and Causes

1.     The increase in New York’s slave population caused tensions between enslaved Africans and European colonists (Harris, 2024).

2.     Poor labor conditions and racial limitations are among the causes of collective resistance.

B.    The Revolt

1.     On April 6, 1712, nearly two dozen enslaved Africans launched an armed revolt in New York City.

2.     The revolt caused several deaths and led to panic among white residents (Harris, 2024).

C.    Aftermath and Impact

1.     The colonial government executed twenty-one enslaved rebels and imposed stricter slave codes.

2.     The revolt showed the rising fear of urban slave revolts in the Northern colonies (Huston, 2019).

III.           The Black Seminole Slave Rebellion (1835–1838)

A.    Background

1.     Escaped enslaved Africans joined Seminole groups in Florida.

2.     The expansionist policies of the United States threatened both groups and cause them to organize resistance.

B.    Rebellion and Leaders

1.     The Black Seminoles joined the Seminoles to resist removal during the Second Seminole War.

2.     Leaders like John Horse and Wild Cat planned joint strikes against U.S. forces.

C.    Consequences

1.     Many Black Seminoles subsequently sought asylum and independence in Mexico (Schmitt, 2025).

2.     Their actions exemplified the transnational dimensions of freedom struggles in the Americas.

 

IV.           The Creole Rebellion (1841)

A.    Background

1.     The Creole revolt occurred on a U.S. slave ship transporting enslaved individuals from Virginia to New Orleans (Sang & Daszyńska, 2020).

2.     The mutiny was instigated by Madison Washington, a formerly enslaved man, claiming a freedom both for himself and others.

B.    The Revolt and British Involvement

1.     The mutineers redirected the ship towards Nassau and British authorities emancipated most of the enslaved upon their arrival (Sang & Daszyńska, 2020).

2.     The Creole incident exacerbated U.S.–British diplomatic relations regarding slavery and maritime rights (Rothera, 2021).

C.    Legacy

1.     Abolitionists adopted the revolt as an example of a successful slave revolt to declare maritime emancipation.

2.     The revolt and those discussions continued to build towards later abolitionist arguments made in Britain and during the U.S.

V. Comparative Analysis and Conclusion

A.    Regardless of the different forms of rebellion, urban, frontier, or maritime, they reveal resistance based on both geography and political reasons (Huston, 2019).

B.    Even after violent suppression the rebellions served to motivate abolitionists and expose the moral incongruities of slavery (Rothera, 2021).

C.    Even after violent suppression the rebellions served to motivate abolitionists and expose the moral incongruities of slavery (Rothera, 2021).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bibliography

Ciobanu, E. (2025). Coerced migration, migrating rhetoric: The ‘Forked Tongue’ of Native American removal policy in the nineteenth-century United States. In Culture, Literature and Migration (pp. 89–101). Transnational Press London. https://www.ceeol.com/search/chapter-detail?id=841593

Harris, L. M. (2024). In the shadow of slavery: African Americans in New York City, 1626–1863. University of Chicago Press. https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=KrbdEAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PR5&dq=Harris,+L.+M.+(2024).+In+the+shadow+of+slavery:+African+Americans+in+New+York+City,+1626%E2%80%931863.+University+of+Chicago+Press.&ots=GVrnah8osu&sig=Cvz0mw9m_dUJoVFtzVtZeh8SOoc

Huston, J. L. (2019). Slavery, capitalism, and the interpretation of the antebellum United States: The problem of definition. Civil War History, 65(2), 119–156. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/14/article/725375/summary

Rothera, E. C. (2021). New perspectives on slavery after 1807: Liberated Africans, British naval officers, and rebel slaves. The Northern Mariner/Le marin du nord, 31(2), 189–196. https://tnm.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/default/article/download/158/151

Sang, N. V., & Daszyńska, J. A. (2020). The problem of the abolition of slavery and maritime rights on U.S. vessels with regards to British–American relations in the first half of the 19th century. Przegląd Nauk Historycznych, 19(2), 105–139. https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1042495.pdf

Schmitt, K. M. (2025). Mexico and the United States, 1821–1973: Conflict and coexistence. Plunkett Lake Press. https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=itiOEQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT8&dq=Schmitt,+K.+M.+(2025).+Mexico+and+the+United+States,+1821%E2%80%931973:+Conflict+and+coexistence.+Plunkett+Lake+Press.&ots=zo3m833Dnu&sig=YjMDq7355NM0Z1_O8z75t5rp_6o

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