Home / Full timeline / The Stono Rebellion begins but is stopped a week later by South Carolina troops. In response, the General Assembly establishes the Negro Act of 1740.
The Stono Rebellion begins but is stopped a week later by South Carolina troops. In response, the General Assembly establishes the Negro Act of 1740.
1739 (Sept 9)
The Stono Rebellion, often referred to as Cato's Conspiracy or Cato's Rebellion was a Black uprising that had its start in South Carolina's colony on September 9, 1739. The Southern Colonial empires' biggest Black uprising resulted in the deaths of 25 colonists and 35 to 50 Africans. As the rebels were Catholic and several spoke Portuguese, it is likely that they were from the Central African Kingdom of Kongo. Jemmy, the insurrection's commander, was an educated enslaved African. However, he is sometimes known as "Cato" and was probably enslaved by the Cato (or Cater) family, who resided north of the Stono River and close to the Ashley River. They were headed for Spanish Florida, where numerous declarations had offered fleeing Blacks from British North America. Before being stopped and routed by the South Carolina troops close to the Edisto River, Jemmy and his band recruited approximately 60 additional enslaved Africans and killed over 20 white people. After another 30 miles (50 km) of travel, the militia was finally routed a week later. The few remaining Blacks were sold into marketplaces in the West Indies; the majority of the captured enslaved Africans were put to death. The General Assembly established the Negro Act of 1740 in response to the uprising, which limited slaves' freedoms while enhancing working conditions and putting a stop to the importation of additional slaves.
References:
- • Stanley, W. (2020). Fear and rebellion in South Carolina: The 1739 Stono Rebellion and Colonial Slave Society.