Gabriel Prosser

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    Gabriel's Conspiracy1799 - 1800

    Gabriel was born in 1776, on Thomas Prosser's tobacco plantation in Henrico County,Virginia. When he was about ten, Gabriel and his brother Solomon began training asblacksmiths. Although almost nothing is known about Gabriel's parents, it is likely that hisfather was a blacksmith, because skills were typically passed from generation to generation inVirginia slave families. As a child, Gabriel was also taught to read and write.

    Gabriel was unusually intelligent, and unusually large; by the age of 20 he was six feet, two orthree inches tall, and was enormously strong from his years of smithing. Even older slaves sawhim as a leader.

    Prosser died in 1798, and his son Thomas Henry Prosser, at the age of 22, became the newmaster of the Brookfield Plantation. Thomas Henry was a cruel and economically ambitiousmaster, and it is likely that he pushed his slaves too hard. He also hired out some of his skilledslaves, including Gabriel and Solomon, a practice that was common in Virginia at the time --and one that allowed slaves more freedom than some Virginians were comfortable with.Although the state legislature made laws attempting to curtail hiring out, they were notenforced, largely because local merchants and artisans relied heavily on the cheap labor thatthey could get from hiring slaves, as opposed to white tradesmen.

    Thomas Henry allowed Gabriel to hire himself out to masters in and around Richmond, givinghim access to a certain amount of freedom, as well as money. Gabriel also met fellow hiredslaves, free blacks, and white laborers, with whom he shared work and leisure time.

    Many free blacks, though they faced overwhelming discrimination, managed to prosper assmall business owners in the Richmond economy. Even more threatening to city authoritieswere the bonds that were formed among slaves, free blacks and working class whites, whoworked and socialized together, especially in a city in which whites, and especially wealthywhites, were in the minority. Laws were passed curtailing socializing between slaves and freeblacks, and interracial grog shops were raided.

    Gabriel experienced several strong influences: the rhetoric of the American Revolution; theuprising in Saint Domingue, the radical words of white artisans who championed the workingclass; the success exhibited by free blacks; his own hatred of the merchants who routinelycheated the slaves they hired; his desire to be free and to prosper. He was moving toward arevolutionary stance that Solomon described in his court confession: "My brother Gabriel wasthe person who influenced me to join him and others in order that (as he said) we mightconquer the white people and possess ourselves of their property."

    In September of 1799, Gabriel, Solomon, and a fellow slave named Jupiter stole a pig. When

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    caught by white overseer Absalom Johnson, Gabriel wrestled him to the ground and bit offmost of his ear. In court, he was found guilty of maiming a white man, a capital offense, butGabriel escaped execution through a loophole called "benefit of clergy," that allowed him tochoose public branding over execution, if he could recite a verse from the Bible. Gabrielrecited his verse, and then was branded in his left hand in open court. The branding, as well as

    the month he spent in jail, was the last in a long chain of offenses that pushed him toward openrebellion.

    Inspired by Saint Domingue and spurred on by working-class talk of a truly egalitarian society,Gabriel decided it was time to act. He believed that if the slaves rose and fought for theirrights, the poor white people would join them. His plan involved seizing Capitol Square inRichmond and taking Governor James Monroe as a hostage, in order to bargain with cityauthorities. According to later testimony, one of the conspirators also "was to go to the nationof Indians called Catawbas to persuade them to join the negroes to fight the white people." Itwas also believed that a French "army was landed at South Key, which they hoped would assistthem." Their banner would bear the motto "death or Liberty," the battle cry of Saint Domingue.

    Gabriel conveyed his plan to Solomon and Ben, another of Prosser's slaves, and the men beganrecruiting soldiers. They were later joined by other recruiters, most notably Jack Ditcher andBen Woolfolk. The rebels did not include women in their army. While the majority of the menwere slaves, the conspirators also drew free blacks and a few white workers to their cause,especially as they began recruiting in Richmond. Two Frenchmen and militant abolitionists,Charles Quersey and Alexander Beddenhurst, joined the ranks as leaders. A slave recruitnamed King, when told of the plot, said, "I was never so glad to hear anything in my life. I amready to join them at any moment. I could slay the white people like sheep."

    The conspirators continued recruiting from Richmond and other Virginia towns, including

    Petersburg, Norfolk and Albemarle, and from the counties of Caroline and Louisa. After somedifficulty, they were also successful in recruiting slaves from the Henrico County countryside.In this way they were preparing for the most far-reaching slave revolt ever planned in U.S.history. They also amassed weapons and began hammering swords out of scythes and moldingbullets.

    By August of 1800, Gabriel's army was ready. Their plan, necessarily more elaborate now,included the taking of Norfolk and Petersburg by the men living there. Gabriel announced thatthey would move on the night of Saturday, August 30. As the lieutenants delivered news of thedate to the outlying areas, a rumor of insurrection surfaced among Richmond whites, whoreported it to Governor Monroe, who ignored it.

    On August 30, a torrential rain began, described by James Callender, a person in jail forviolating the sedition law, as "the most terrible thunder Storm... that I ever witnessed in thisState." A handful of men gathered at the appointed meeting spot, but it soon became clear thatthe quickly rising water would make key roads and bridges impassable.

    The conspirators decided to postpone until Sunday evening, August 31. But before they had achance to carry out their plan, slaves in two different locations cracked under the pressure and

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    told their masters. Soon Governor Monroe was alerted, and white patrols, later joined by thestate militia, began roaming the countryside searching for rebels. Gabriel and Jack Ditcherdisappeared. Others eluded capture for several days, but by September 9, almost 30 slaveswere in jail awaiting trial in the court of "Oyer and Terminer," a special court in which slaveswere tried without benefit of jury.

    When the trials began on September 11, Gabriel and Ditcher were still at large, and whiteauthorities had no idea of how extensive the insurrection had been. But white Virginians wereterrified at the thought of how close the danger had come. One white fear, typical in times ofblack rebellion, was that black men were out to get white women.

    One strategy that the white authorities used was to offer a full pardon to a handful of slaveswho were willing to give testimony against the other conspirators. Gervas Storrs and JosephSeldon, two of the court magistrates, found two key witnesses in this way: Ben, one ofProsser's slaves, and Ben Woolfolk. Prosser's Ben came forward first, and his testimony sent anumber of slaves from his area to the gallows, including Gabriel's brothers Solomon and

    Martin. But Prosser's Ben did not have enough contact with slaves from the outlying areas, andso the court looked to Ben Woolfolk to give the damning evidence. Other slaves providedfurther testimony.

    On September 14, Gabriel swam to a schooner called Mary on the James River. He asked tosee the captain, a white man named Richardson Taylor. Two black men on board, Taylor'sformer slave Isham and a slave named Billy, identified Gabriel as the leader of the plot.Though a former overseer, Taylor had apparently had a change of heart about slavery. Heattempted to take Gabriel to freedom. However, when the ship docked in Norfolk, Billy alertedwhite authorities to Gabriel's presence on board, no doubt thinking of the $300 reward beingoffered for Gabriel's capture. Gabriel and Taylor were both arrested. Billy was rewarded, but

    not what he had expected. He received $50, far below what he needed to purchase his freedom.

    On October 6, Gabriel was put on trial. Several witnesses came forward, but Gabriel himselfrefused to make a statement. He was sentenced to be executed the next day, but asked that hissentence not be carried out until October 10, so that he could be executed along with six otherslaves who were to hang on that day. The court agreed, but on October 10 they hanged theslaves in three different locations; Gabriel was hanged alone on the town gallows.

    In all, the trials lasted almost two months, and 26 slaves were executed by hanging; one moredied by hanging while in custody. At least 65 slaves were tried; of those not hanged, somewere transported to other states, some were found not guilty, and a few were pardoned. By law,

    slaveholders had to be reimbursed by the state for lost property, so in cases where slaves wereexecuted or transported, their masters were reimbursed for their total worth declared by thecourt. Virginia paid over $8900 to slaveholders for the executed slaves.

    Although most of the suspects were tried in Richmond, blacks captured in other counties weretried in those locations. Many of them shared the same fates as the Richmond slaves. However,in Hanover County, two slaves escaped with the help of blacks outside the prison and werenever recovered. In Norfolk County, the magistrates questioned slaves and working-class

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    whites alike, trying to find witnesses. But no one, including the accused slaves, would comeforward with evidence, and the slaves were released. In Petersburg, four free blacks werearrested, but they too were released after the frustrated authorities could find no viablewitnesses. There were slaves willing to give condemning evidence, but the testimony of slavesagainst free people was inadmissible in Virginia courts.