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Negro Riots of 1712-1741
Almost impossible for the present Generation
to comprehend its true Character and Effect on the People.
Description of New York at that Time. The Negro Slaves. The
Negro Riot of 1712. Description of it. The Winter of 1741.
Governor's House burned down. Other Fires. Suspicion of the
People. Arrest and Imprisonment of the Blacks. Reward
offered for the supposed Conspirators. Alarm and Flight of
the Inhabitants. Examination and Confession of Mary Burton.
Peggy, the Newfoundland Beauty, and the Hughson Family. The
Conspiracy. Executions. Fast. Hughson's Hearing. Hung in
Chains. The Body, and that of a Negro, left to swing and rot
in the Air. Strange Change in the Appearances of the Bodies.
The People throng to look at them. Negroes burned at the
Stake. Terrific Spectacle. Bloody Summer. Execution of a
Catholic Priest. Strange Scenes. Upper Classes accused.
Executions stopped. Reason of the Panic.
Probably no event of comparatively modern times certainly
none in our history has occurred so extraordinary in some of
its phases, as the negro riot of 1741. We cannot fully
appreciate it, not merely because of the incompleteness of
some of its details, nor from the lapse of time, but because
of our inability to place ourselves in the position or state
of mind of the inhabitants of New York City at that period.
We can no more throw ourselves into the social condition,
and feel the influences of that time, than we can conceive
the outward physical appearance of the embryo metropolis. It
is impossible to stand amid the whirl and uproar of New York
today, and imagine men ploughing, and sowing grain, and
carting hay into barns, where the City Hall now stands. The
conception of nearly all the city lying below the Park,
above it farms to Canal Street, beyond that clearings where
men are burning brush and logs to clear away the fallow, and
still farther on, towards Central Park, an unbroken
wilderness, is so dim and shadowy, that we can hardly fix
its outlines. Yet it was so in 1741. Where now stands the
Tombs, and cluster the crowded tenements of Five Points, was
a pond or lakelet, nearly two miles in circumference and
fifty feet deep, and encircled by a dense forest. Its deep,
sluggish outlet into the Hudson is now Canal Street. In wet
weather there was another water communication with the East
River, near Peck Slip, cutting off the lower part of the
island, leaving another island, containing some eight
hundred acres. Through Broad Street, along which now rolls
each day the stream of business, and swells the tumult of
the Brokers' Board, then swept a deep stream, up which
boatmen rowed their boats to sell oysters. The water that
supplied these streams and ponds is now carried off through
immense sewers, deep under ground, over which the
unconscious population tread. Where Front and Water Streets
on the east side, and West Greenwich and Washington on the
west side, now stretch, were then the East and Hudson
Rivers, having smooth and pebbly beaches. There was not a
single sidewalk in all the city, and only some half dozen
paved streets. On the Battery stood the fort, in which were
the Governor's and secretary's houses, and over which
floated the British flag.
But all this outward appearance is no more unlike the New
York of today than its internal condition.
The population numbered only about ten thousand, one-fifth
of which was negroes, who were slaves. Their education being
wholly neglected, they were ignorant and debased, and
addicted to almost every vice. They were, besides, restive
under their bondage amid the severe punishments often
inflicted on them, which caused their masters a great deal
of anxiety. Not isolated as an inland plantation, but packed
in a narrow space, they had easy communication with each
other, and worse than all, with the reckless and depraved
crews of the vessels that came into port. It is true, the
most stringent measures were adopted to prevent them from
assembling together; yet, in spite of every precaution,
there would now and then come to light some plan or project
that would fill the whites with alarm. They felt half the
time as though walking on the crust of a volcano, and hence
were in a state of mind to exaggerate every danger, and give
credit to every sinister rumor.
The experience of the past, as well as the present state of
feeling among the slaves, justified this anxiety and dread;
for only thirty years before occurred just such an outbreak
as they now feared. On the 7th of April, in 1712, between
one and two o'clock in the morning, the house of Peter Van
Tilburgh was set on fire by negroes, which was evidently
meant as a signal for a general revolt.
The cry of fire roused the neighboring inhabitants, and they
rushed out through the unpaved muddy streets, toward the
blazing building. As they approached it, they saw, to their
amazement, in the red light of the flames, a band of negroes
standing in front, armed with guns and long knives. Before
the whites could hardly comprehend what the strange
apparition meant, the negroes fired, and then rushed on them
with their knives, killing several on the spot. The rest,
leaving the building to the mercy of the flames, ran to the
fort on the Battery, and roused the Governor. Springing from
his bed, he rushed out and ordered a cannon to be fired from
the ramparts to alarm the town. As the heavy report boomed
over the bay and shook the buildings of the town, the
inhabitants leaped from their beds, and looking out of the
windows, saw the sky lurid with flames. Their dread and
uncertainty were increased, when they heard the heavy splash
of soldiers through the mud, and the next moment saw their
bayonets gleam out of the gloom, as they hurried forward
towards the fire. In the meantime, other negroes had rushed
to the spot, so that soon there were assembled, in
proportion to the white population, what in the present
population of the city would be fully 10,000 negroes.
The rioters stood firm till they saw the bayonets flashing
in the fire-light, and then, giving one volley, fled into
the darkness northward, towards what is now Wall Street. The
scattered inhabitants they met, who, roused by the cannon,
were hastening to the fire, they attacked with their knives,
killing and wounding several. The soldiers, firing at random
into the darkness, followed after them, accompanied by a
crowd of people. The negroes made for the woods and swamps
near where the Park now stands, and disappearing in the
heavy shadows of the forest, were lost to view. Knowing it
would be vain to follow them into the thickets, the soldiers
and inhabitants surrounded them and kept watch till morning.
Many, of course, got off and buried themselves in the
deeper, more extensive woods near Canal Street, but many
others were taken prisoners. Some, finding themselves
closely pressed and all avenues of escape cut off,
deliberately shot themselves, preferring such a death to the
one they knew awaited them. How many were killed and
captured during the morning, the historian does not tell us.
We can only infer that the number must have been great, from
the statement he incidentally makes, that "during the day
nineteen more were taken, tried, and executed some that
turned State's evidence were transported." "Eight or ten
whites had been murdered," and many more wounded.
It was a terrible event, and remembered by the present
inhabitants with horror and dismay. To the little handful
occupying the point of the island, it was a tragedy as great
as a riot in New York today would be, in which was a loss of
5,000 or more on each side.
Many middle aged men, in 1741, were young men at that time,
and remembered the fearful excitement that prevailed, and it
was a common topic of conversation.
The state of things, therefore, which we have described, was
natural. This was rendered worse by the arrival, in the
winter of 1741, of a Spanish vessel, which had been captured
as a prize, the crew of which was composed in part of
negroes, who were sold at auction as slaves. These became
very intractable, and in spite of the floggings they
received, uttered threats that they knew would reach their
masters' ears. Still, no evidence of any general plot
against the inhabitants was suspected, and things were
moving on in their usual way, when, on the 18th of March, a
wild and blustering day, the Governor's house in the fort
was discovered to be on fire. Fanned by a fierce southeast
wind, the flames spread to the King's chapel, the
secretary's house, barracks, and stables; and in spite of
all efforts to save them, were totally consumed. The origin
of the fire was supposed to be accidental, but a few days
after, Captain Warren's house, near the fort, was found to
be on fire. Two or three days later, the storehouse of Mr.
Van Zandt was discovered on fire. Still, no general
suspicions were aroused. Three more days passed, when a cow
stall was reported on fire, and a few hours later, the house
of Mr. Thompson; the fire in the latter case originating in
the room where a negro slave slept. The very next day, live
coals were discovered under the stable of John Murray, on
Broadway. This, evidently, was no accident, but the result
of design, and the people began to be alarmed. The day
following, the house of a sergeant near the fort was seen to
be on fire, and soon after, flames arose from the roof of a
dwelling near the Fly Market. The rumor now spread like
wildfire through the town that it was the work of
incendiaries. It seems to us a small foundation to base such
a belief on, but it must be remembered that the public mind
was in a state to believe almost anything.
The alarm was increased by the statement of Mrs. Earle, who
said that on Sunday, as she was looking out of her window,
she saw three negroes swaggering up Broadway, engaged in
earnest conversation. Suddenly she heard one of them
exclaim, "Fire! fire! Scorch! scorch! a little d n by and
by!" and then throwing up his hands, laughed heartily.
Coupled with the numerous fires that had occurred, and the
rumors afloat, it at once excited her suspicions that this
conversation had something to do with a plot to burn the
city. She therefore immediately reported it to an alderman,
and he, next day, to the justices.
Although the number of buildings thus mysteriously set on
fire was, in reality, small, yet it was as great in
proportion to the town then, as three hundred would be in
New York today. Less than that number, we imagine, would
create a panic in the city, especially if the public mind
was in a feverish state, as, for instance, during the recent
civil war.
Some thought the Spanish negroes had set the buildings on
fire from revenge, especially as those of the Government
were the first to suffer. Others declared that it was a plot
of the entire negro population to burn down the city. This
belief was strengthened by the fact that, in one of the last
fires, a slave of one of the most prominent citizens was
seen to leap from the window, and make off over garden
fences. A shout was immediately raised by the spectators,
and a pursuit commenced. The terrified fugitive made
desperate efforts to escape, but being overtaken, he was
seized, and, pale as death, lifted on men's shoulders and
carried to jail.
Added to all this, men now remembered it lacked but a few
days of being the anniversary of the bloody riot of thirty
years ago. They began to watch and question the negroes, and
one of the Spanish sailors, on being interrogated, gave such
unsatisfactory, suspicious answers, that the whole crew were
arrested, and thrown into prison. But that same afternoon,
while the magistrates, whom the alarming state of things had
called together, were in consultation about it, the cry of
"Fire!" again startled the entire community. The ringing of
the alarm bell had now become almost as terrifying as the
sound of the last trumpet, and the panic became general. The
first step was to ascertain if there were any strangers in
town who might be concealed enemies, and a thorough search
was made the militia being ordered out, and sentries posted
at the ends of all the streets, with orders to stop all
persons carrying bags and bundles. This was done on the 13th
of April. None being found, the conclusion became inevitable
that some dark, mysterious plot lay at the bottom of it all,
and the inhabitants thought the city was doomed, like Sodom.
First, the more timorous packed up their valuable articles
and fled into the country, up toward Canal Street. This
increased the panic, which swelled until almost the entire
population were seen hurrying through the streets, fleeing
for their lives. The announcement of an approaching army
would not have created a greater stampede. Every cart and
vehicle that could be found was engaged at any price, into
which whole families were piled, and hurried away to the
farms beyond Chambers Street, in the neighborhood of Canal
Street. It was a strange spectacle, and the farmers could
hardly believe their senses, at this sudden inundation into
their quiet houses of the people of the city. The town
authorities were also swept away in the general excitement,
and negroes of all ages and sexes were arrested by the
wholesale, and hurried to prison. The Supreme Court was to
sit in the latter part of April, and the interval of a few
days was spent in efforts to get at the guilty parties. But
nothing definite could be ascertained, as the conspirators,
whoever they were, kept their own secret. At length,
despairing of getting at the truth in any other way, the
authorities offered a reward of a hundred pounds, and a full
pardon to any one who would turn State's evidence, and
reveal the names of the ringleaders. This was pretty sure to
bring out the facts, if there were any to disclose, and
almost equally sure to obtain a fabricated story, if there
was nothing to tell. A poor, ignorant slave, shaking with
terror in his cell, would hardly be proof against such an
inducement as a free pardon, and to him or her an almost
fabulous sum of money, if he had anything to reveal, while
the temptation to invent a tale that would secure both
liberty and money was equally strong.
On the 21st of April the court met, Judges Philips and
Horsmander presiding. A jury was impaneled, but although
there was no lack of prisoners, there was almost a total
want of evidence sufficient to put a single man on trial.
The reward offered had not borne its legitimate fruits, and
no one offered to make any revelations.
Among the first brought up for examination was Mary Burton,
a colored servant girl, belonging to John Hughson, the
keeper of a low, dirty negro tavern over on the west side of
the city, near the Hudson River. This was a place of
rendezvous for the worst negroes of the town; and from some
hints that Mary had dropped, it was suspected it had been
the head-quarters of the conspirators. But when, brought
before the Grand Jury, she refused to be sworn. They
entreated her to take the oath and tell the whole truth, but
she only shook her head. They then threatened her, but with
no better success; they promised she should be protected
from danger and shielded from prosecution, but she still
maintained an obstinate silence. They then showed her the
reward, and attempted to bribe her with the wealth in store
for her, but she almost spat on it in her scorn. This poor
negro slave showed an independence and stubbornness in the
presence of the jury that astonished them. Finding all their
efforts vain, they ordered her to be sent to jail. This
terrified her, and she consented to be sworn. But after
taking the oath, she refused to say anything about the fire.
A theft had been traced to Hughson, and she told all she
knew about that, but about the fires would neither deny nor
affirm anything. They then appealed to her conscience
painted before her the terrors of the final judgment, and
the torments of hell, till at last she broke down, and
proposed to make a clean breast of it. She commenced by
saying that Hughson had threatened to take her life if she
told, and then again hesitated. But at length, by persistent
efforts, the following facts were wrenched from her by
piecemeal. She said that three negroes giving their names
had been in the habit of meeting at the tavern, and talking
about burning of the fort and city and murdering the people,
and that Hughson and his wife had promised to help them;
after which Hughson was to be governor and Cuff Phillipse
king. That the first part of the story was true, there is
little doubt. How much, with the imagination and love of the
marvelous peculiar to her race, she added to it, it is not
easy to say. She said, moreover, that but one white person
beside her master and mistress was in the conspiracy, and
that was an Irish girl known as Peggy, "the Newfoundland
Beauty." She had several aliases , and was an abandoned
character, being a prostitute to the negroes, and at this
time kept as a mistress by a bold, desperate negro named
Caesar. This revelation of Mary's fell on the Grand Jury
like a bombshell. The long sought secret they now felt was
out. They immediately informed the magistrates. Of course
the greatest excitement followed. Peggy was next examined,
but she denied Mary Burton's story in toto, swore that she
knew nothing of any conspiracy or of the burning of the
stores; that if she should accuse any one it would be a lie,
and blacken her own soul.
It is rather a severe reflection on the courts of justice of
that period, or we might rather say, perhaps, a striking
illustration of the madness that had seized on all, that
although the law strictly forbade any slave to testify in a
court of justice against a white person, yet this girl Mary
Burton was not only allowed to appear as evidence against
Peggy, but her oath was permitted to outweigh hers, and
cause her to be sentenced to death. The latter, though an
abandoned, desperate character, was seized with terror at
the near approach of death, and begged to be allowed another
examination, which was granted, and she professed to make a
full confession. It is a little singular that while she
corroborated Mary Burton's statement as to the existence of
a conspiracy, she located the seat of it not in Hughson's
tavern, but in a miserable shanty near the Battery, kept by
John Romme, who, she said, had promised to carry them all to
a new country, and give them their liberty, if they would
murder the whites and bring him the plunder. Like Mary
Burton's confession, if truthful at all, it evidently had a
large mixture of falsehood in it.
On Saturday, May 9th, Peggy was again brought in, and
underwent a searching examination. Some of her statements
seemed improbable, and they therefore tested them in every
possible way. It lasted for several hours, and resulted in a
long detailed confession, in which she asserted, among other
things, that it was the same plot that failed in 1712, when
the negroes designed to kill all the whites, in fact,
exterminate them from the island. She implicated a great
many negroes in the conspiracy; and every one that she
accused, as they were brought before her, she identified as
being present at the meetings of the conspirators in Romme's
house. The court seemed anxious to avoid any collusion
between the prisoners, and therefore kept them apart, so
that each story should rest on its own basis. By this course
they thought they would be able to distinguish what was true
and what was false.
Either from conscious guilt, or from having got some inkling
of the charge to be brought against him, Romme fled before
he could be arrested. His wife, however, and the negroes
whose names Peggy gave, were sent to jail.
On the 11th of May, or twenty days after the court convened,
the executions commenced. On this day, Caesar and Prince,
two of the three negroes Mary Burton testified against, were
hung, though not for the conspiracy, but for theft. They
were abandoned men, and died recklessly. Peggy and Hughson
and his wife were next condemned. The former, finding that
her confession did not, as had been promised, secure her
pardon, retracted all she had said, and exculpated entirely
the parties whose arrest she had caused.
An atmosphere of gloom now rested over the city; every face
showed signs of dread. In this state of feeling the
Lieutenant-governor issued a proclamation, appointing a day
of fasting and humiliation, not only in view of this
calamity, but on account also of the want and loss caused by
the past severe winter, and the declaration of war by
England against Spain. When the day arrived, every shop was
closed and business of all kinds suspended, and the silence
and repose of the Sabbath rested on the entire community.
Without regard to sect, all repaired to the places of
worship, where the services were performed amid the deepest
solemnity.
Great Riots of New York 1712 to 1873,
Including a Full and Complete Account of the
Four Days' Draft Riot of 1863
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