Home / Full timeline / The German Coast Uprising, America’s largest enslaved Black insurgency in history, happens in present day Louisiana, but is suppressed by the local militia.
The German Coast Uprising, America’s largest enslaved Black insurgency in history, happens in present day Louisiana, but is suppressed by the local militia.
1811 (Jan 8 - 10)
Occurring on the east bank of the Mississippi River, 64 to 125 enslaved Black men marched from sugar plantations on what was the German Coast (present-day Acadiana) of Louisiana, collecting more men along the way; an estimated 200 - 500. During their 2-day 20-mile march, the men, carrying mostly hand tools, burned crops and houses in their path until an armed militia of white men killed 40 - 45 of them in a battle on January 10, while suffering no fatalities themselves. They then hunted down and killed a few others without trial. Over the next two weeks, white planters and officials interrogated, tried, executed and decapitated an additional 44 escaped enslaved Blacks who had been captured. Executions were generally by hanging or firing squad. Heads were displayed on pikes to intimidate other enslaved Blacks.