Home / Full timeline / Enslaved Blacks at Chatham Manor in Stafford County, Virginia rebelled, overpowered, and whipped their overseer and assistant.
Enslaved Blacks at Chatham Manor in Stafford County, Virginia rebelled, overpowered, and whipped their overseer and assistant.
1805 (Jan)
Chatham Manor, a symbol of the country’s racial tensions, was a 6,000-acre plantation with 60-90 enslaved Blacks depending on the season. In January of 1805 some enslaved Blacks rebelled after an overseer ordered them back to work at what they considered was too soon after the Christmas holidays. They overpowered and whipped their overseer and four others who tried to force them back to work. An armed posse of white men quickly gathered and killed one enslaved Black person. Two more died trying to escape capture. Two other enslaved Blacks were deported, likely to the Caribbean or Louisiana, and plantation owner William Fitzhugh, a planter and delegate to the second continental Congress of Virginia, soon sold the property.