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  2. Nat Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nat_Turner

    Nat Turner (October 2, 1800 – November 11, 1831) was an enslaved Black carpenter and preacher who led a four-day rebellion of both enslaved and free Black people in Southampton County, Virginia in August 1831.

  3. Nat Turner's Rebellion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nat_Turner's_Rebellion

    Led by Nat Turner, the rebels, made up of enslaved African Americans, killed between 55 and 65 White people, making it the deadliest slave revolt for the latter racial group in U.S. history. The rebellion was effectively suppressed within a few days, at Belmont Plantation on the morning of August 23, but Turner survived in hiding for more than ...

  4. Invisible churches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invisible_Churches

    These practices were done in secret away from slaveholders. This was done in the Hoodoo church among the enslaved. Nat Turner had visions and omens which he interpreted came from spirit, and that spirit told him to start a rebellion to free enslaved people through armed resistance. Turner combined African spirituality with Christianity.

  5. Records of 3.5 million enslaved people are digitized, giving ...

    www.aol.com/news/digital-records-19th-century...

    After more than 20 years researching her family’s origin in America, Nicka Sewell-Smith found the name of an uncle who had filed a complaint about having his

  6. Slave rebellion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slave_rebellion

    Turner and the other rebels were eventually stopped by state militias. [18] The rebellion resulted in the hanging of about 56 slaves, including Nat Turner himself. Up to 200 other blacks were killed during the hysteria that followed, few of whom likely had anything to do with the uprising. [19]

  7. Thomas Jefferson's enslaved mistress' living quarters found - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-07-03-thomas-jeffersons...

    The Mountaintop Project is a multi-year, $35 million effort to restore Monticello as Jefferson knew it, and to tell the stories of the peopleenslaved and free—who lived and worked on the ...

  8. Elijah Anderson (Underground Railroad) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elijah_Anderson...

    Anderson often entered Kentucky in order to communicate between enslaved and free black people and did so on many occasions via waterways, on vessels such as the Cincinnati mail-boat Superior. [ 3 ] [ 5 ] He was also known to communicate well with white abolitionists and free black activists in cities such Carrollton, Kentucky , Frankfort ...

  9. Thomas R. Gray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_R._Gray

    Thomas Ruffin Gray (1800 – died after 1834) was an American attorney who represented several enslaved people during the trials in the wake of Nat Turner's Rebellion. Though he was not the attorney who represented Nat Turner, instead he interviewed him and wrote The Confessions of Nat Turner.