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The Poor Prole’s Almanac

Echoes of the Haitian Revolution: Denmark Vesey & the Charleston Uprising part 2

The Poor Prole’s Almanac

Bleav + The Poor Prole’s Alamanac

Home & Garden, Science, Nature, Leisure, Education, How To

5761 Ratings

🗓️ 9 June 2023

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Denmark Vesey, a carpenter and formerly enslaved person, allegedly planned an enslaved insurrection to coincide with Bastille Day in Charleston, South Carolina in 1822. Vesey modeled his rebellion after the successful 1791 slave revolution in Haiti. His plans called for his followers to execute the white enslavers, liberate the city of Charleston, and then sail to Haiti before the white power structure could retaliate. Vesey and several of his co-conspirators worshiped at the African Church, the AME congregation which became Mother Emanuel after the Civil War. Along with white abolitionists in the North, Vesey referenced the Bible in his attacks on the institution of slavery. In the aftermath of the execution, white Charlestonians tore down the church and supported new efforts to control the black majority. Funds were appropriated to support a Municipal Guard of 150 men and the construction of "a Citadel" to house them and weapons. In 1843, the structure became home to the cadets of the South Carolina Military Academy. Additionally, as Vesey's rebellion relied on assistance from free black sailors, South Carolina passed legislation known as the Negro Seamen Acts. The act called for the incarceration of visiting free black sailors in local jails while their vessel remained in Charleston to eliminate contact between free black sailors from outside of South Carolina and black Charlestonians. Despite protests from northern states and British consuls, South Carolina stubbornly insisted on its right to police its population in this way. Denmark Vesey was later held up as a hero among abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass, during the Civil War. Douglass used Vesey's name as a rallying cry in recruiting and inspiring African American troops, including the 54th Massachusetts Infantry. Vesey's son, Robert, attended the April 14, 1865 ceremony at Fort Sumter. Today, however, his name remains largely unknown despite his foundational role in accelerating further slave rebellions and ultimately the civil war itself. We discuss why this is the case and what lessons can be learned from this story.   To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac For more information and updates, visit www.poorproles.com and subscribe to our e-mail list. For the supplemental reader that goes along with the podcast, visit: https://poorprolesalmanac.substack.com   Sources: Jeremy Schipper “Denmark Vesey’s Bible” https://userpages.umbc.edu/~bouton/History407/SlaveStats.htm https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/defining-charlestons-free-people-color

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to the Poor Proles Almanac, part two of the Denmark-Vessie story.

0:19.5

Unlike most episodes of anything you've ever listened to,

0:22.9

despite it being number two or part two, part one is actually not necessary for part two,

0:27.8

since it's more of a philosophical conversation around what had happened and the implications it had

0:33.0

and how we can see parallels in the way things are playing out right now.

0:37.2

I'm joined as always by my melatonin gifted, wait, no, melanin gifted friend Elliot.

0:43.3

Yeah, definitely not melatonin.

0:45.2

Don't give me those false promises.

0:47.1

And we also have Matt.

0:48.6

I do have the melatonin.

0:50.9

Good for you.

0:51.7

You holding out on me?

0:53.1

Yeah.

0:53.8

How you doing today?

0:54.8

Sleepy?

0:55.6

Very sleepy.

0:56.7

Seemed real sad last week.

0:58.6

I was sad last week.

1:00.3

Well, I guess we recorded like an hour ago, so you seem real sad at the end of that last episode.

1:05.9

Yeah, well, it's sad stuff going on.

1:08.7

I mean, yeah.

1:09.6

This is a really, really weird story for a number of reasons, reasons we're going to get

...

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