Home / Full timeline / Nat Turner’s rebellion kills roughly 60 people but is suppressed and spreads fear among the South American Whites.
Nat Turner’s rebellion kills roughly 60 people but is suppressed and spreads fear among the South American Whites.
1831 (Aug 21 - 23)
In Southampton County, Nat Turner, a devout enslaved preacher, led a revolt that killed 60 people before being defeated by state militia at the Belmont Plantation. Known to be intelligent and called “The Prophet” by his followers, Nat believed he saw signs from God to defend God’s kingdom by fighting the serpent. Starting with a few trusted followers, he eventually gathered 70 enslaved and free Blacks who traveled from house to house, freeing enslaved people and killing many of the white people whom they encountered. The state militia eventually defeated the insurrection on Aug 23. Turner believed the revolutionary violence would serve to awaken the attitudes of whites to the reality of the inherent brutality in slaveholding. He later said that he wanted to spread "terror and alarm" among whites. Following the insurrection, the state executed 56 Blacks, and militias killed at least 100 more, many of whom were not involved with the rebellion. News of the revolt spread quickly, creating fear among the whites who began attacking Blacks at random for up to 2 weeks after the revolt had been suppressed. Blacks suspected of participating in the rebellion were beheaded by the militia and their severed heads were mounted on poles at crossroads as a form of intimidation (a section of Virginia State Route 658 was labeled as "Blackhead Signpost Road" in reference to these events until 2021, when it was renamed "Signpost Road"). Turner himself eluded capture for about six weeks before being discovered by a white farmer in Southampton County. Showing no remorse (believing it was God’s work), he was tried and hanged on November 11 in Jerusalem, Virginia. They then dissected his body and used his skin to make purses as souvenirs. Of the five free Blacks tried for participation in the insurrection, one was hanged while the others were acquitted. In retaliation to the revolt, the general assembly passed legislation making it unlawful to teach reading and writing to either enslaved or free Blacks and restricting all Blacks from holding religious meetings without the presence of a licensed white minister. Other slave-holding states in the South enacted similar laws. Across Virginia and other Southern states, legislators made criminal the possession of abolitionist publications by either whites or blacks.