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Plaque commemorating the Morant Bay Rebellion

BBC2016

Black Cultural Archives

Black Cultural Archives
London, United Kingdom

In the decades after Britain’s abolition of slavery in 1833 the sugar islands of the British West Indies, which had once been so incredibly profitable, started to go into decline. With much of the island’s soil exhausted, by the 1860s there were thousands of acres that no-one was farming. And hundreds of thousands of former slaves had no work and no land. People were starving. The crisis came to a head in a small town called Morant Bay.
The spark that ignited the flame was a case held in this courthouse in 1865 over the eviction of a man who had been farming on an abandoned estate.
A crowd of about 500 - 600 local people headed by rebellion leader Paul Bogle gathered outside, where they were met by the local militia, and the local magistrate began to read the riot act.
People in the crowd responded by throwing stones and then the militia opened fire, killing 7 of them. By the end of the day, the crowd had killed 18 people, including militia men and other officials.
Then the riot fizzled out. This was a small, localised rebellion, but the response of the Jamaican governor, Edward Eyre, made it infamous. On his orders a brutal act of vengeance began, with the killing, beating and terrorising of men, women and children, singled out because of the colour of their skin.
Over 1,000 Jamaicans were brutalised or killed following the rebellion. This plaque commemorates them. It was unveiled at the Black Cultural Archives in September 2016 as part of a remembrancee vent. It is the sister plaque to one unveiled in Morant Bay, Jamaica.
Both were created by BBC History and are two of twenty placed around the world for the series Black and British: A Forgotten History.

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