RIGHT ON THE SCAFFOLD OR THE MARTYRS OF 1822
THE AMERICAN NEGRO ACADEMY
OCCASIONAL PAPERS N.
He was black but comely. Nature
gave him a royal body, nobly planned and proportioned,
and noted for its great strength. There was that
in his countenance, which bespoke a mind within to
match that body, a mind of uncommon native intelligence,
force of will, and capacity to dominate others.
His manners were at once abrupt and crafty, his temper
was imperious, his passions and impulses were those
of a primitive ruler, and his heart was the heart
of a lion. He was often referred to as an old
man, but he was not an old man, when he died on a gallows
at Charleston, S. C., July 2, 1822. No, he was
by no means an old man, whether judged by length of
years or strength of body, for he was on that memorable
July day, seventy-eight years ago, not more than fifty-six
years old, although the hair on his head and face was
then probably white. This circumstance and the
pre-eminence accorded him by his race neighbors, might
account for the references to him, as to that of an
old man.
All things considered, he was truly
an extraordinary man. It is impossible to say
where he was born, or who were his parents. He
was, alas! as far as my knowledge of his personal
history goes, a man without a past. He might
have been born of slave parentage in the West Indies,
or of royal ones in Africa, where, in that case, he
was kidnapped and sold subsequently into slavery in
America. I had almost said that he was a man
without a name. He is certainly a man without
ancestral name. For the name to which he answered
up to the age of fourteen, has been lost forever.
After that time he has been known as Denmark Vesey.
Denmark is a corruption of Telemaque, the praenomen
bestowed upon him at that age by a new master, and
Vesey was the cognomen of that master who was captain
of an American vessel, engaged in the African slave
trade between the islands of St. Thomas and Sto.
Domingo. It is on board of Captain Vesey’s
slave vessel that we catch the earliest glimpse of
our hero. Deeply interesting moment is that,
which revealed thus to us the Negro lad, deeply interesting
and tragical for one and the same cause.
This first appearance of him upon
the stage of history occurred in the year which ended
virtually the war for American Independence, 1781,
during the passage between St. Thomas and Cap Francais,
of Captain Vesey’s slave bark with a cargo of
390 slaves. The lad, Telemaque, was a part of
that sad cargo, undistinguished at the outset of the
voyage from the rest of the human freight. Of
the 389 others, we know absolutely nothing. Not
an incident, nor a token, not even a name has floated
to us across the intervening years, from all that
multitudinous misery, from such an unspeakable tragedy,
except that the ship reached its destination, and
the slaves were sold. Like boats that pass at
sea, that slave vessel loomed for a lurid instant
on the horizon, and was gone forever all
but Denmark Vesey. How it happened that he did
not vanish with the rest of his ill-fated fellows,
will be set down in this paper, which has essayed
to describe the slave plot which he planned, with which
his name is identified, and by which it ought to be,
for all time, hallowed in the memory of every man,
woman and child of Negro descent in America.
On that voyage Captain Vesey was strongly
attracted by the “beauty, intelligence, and
alertness” of one of the slaves on board.
So were the ship’s officers. This particular
object of interest, on the part of the slave-traders,
was a black boy of fourteen summers. He was quickly
made a sort of ship’s pet and plaything, receiving
new garments from his admirers, and the high sounding
name, as I have already mentioned, of Telemaque, which
in slave lingo was subsequently metamorphosed into
Denmark. The lad found himself in sudden favor,
and lifted above his companions in bondage by the
brief and idle regard of that ship’s company.
Brief and idle, indeed, was the interest which he had
aroused in the breasts of those men, as the sequel
showed. But while it lasted it seemed doubtless
very genuine to the boy, as such evidences of human
regard must have afforded him, in his forlorn state,
the keenest pleasure. Bitter, therefore, must
have been his disappointment and grief to find, at
the end, that he had, in reality, no hold whatever
upon the regard of the slave traders. True he
had been separated by captain and officers from the
other slaves during the voyage, but this ephemeral
distinction was speedily lost upon the arrival of
the vessel at Cap Francais, for he was then sold as
a part of the human freight. Ah! he had not been
to those men so much as even a pet cat or dog, for
with a pet cat or dog they would not have so lightly
parted, as they had done with him. He had served
their purpose, had killed for them the dull days of
a dull sail between ports, and he a boy with warm
blood in his heart, and hot yearnings for love in
his soul.
But the slave youth, so beautiful
and attractive, was not to live his life in the island
of Sto. Domingo, or to terminate just then
his relations with the ship and her officers, however
much Captain Vesey had intended to do so. For
Fate, by an unexpected circumstance, threw, for better
or for worse, master and slave together again, after
they had apparently parted forever in the slave mart
of the Cape. This is how Fate played the unexpected
in the boy’s life. According to a local
law for the regulation of the slave trade in that
place, the seller of a slave of unsound health might
be compelled by the buyer to take him back, upon the
production of a certificate to that effect from the
royal physician of the port. The purchaser of
Telemaque availed himself of this law to redeliver
him to Captain Vesey on his return voyage to Sto.
Domingo. For the royal physician of the town had
meanwhile certified that the lad was subject to epileptic
fits. The act of sale was thereupon cancelled,
and the old relations of master and slave between Captain
Vesey and Telemaque, were resumed. Thus, without
design, perhaps, however passionately he might have
desired it, the boy found himself again on board of
his old master’s slave vessel, where he had been
petted and elevated in favor high above his fellow-slaves.
I say perhaps advisedly, for I confess that
it is by no means clear to me whether those epileptic
fits were real or whether they were in truth feigned,
and therefore the initial ruse de guerre of
that bright young intelligence in its long battle
with slavery.
However, I do not mean to consume
space with speculations on this head. Suffice
to say that Telemaque’s condition was improved
by the event. Nor had Captain Vesey any cause
to quarrel with the fate which returned to him the
beautiful Negro youth. For it is recorded that
for twenty years thereafter he proved a faithful servant
to the old slave trader, who retiring in due course
of time from his black business, took up his abode
in Charleston, S. C, where Denmark went to live with
him. There in his new home dame fortune again
remembered her protege, turning her formidable wheel
a second time in his favor. It was then that Denmark,
grown to manhood, drew the grand prize of freedom.
He was about thirty-four years old when this immense
boon came to him.
It is not known for how many eager
and anxious months or even years, Denmark Vesey had
patronized East Bay Street Lottery of Charleston prior
to 1800, when he was rewarded with a prize of $1,500.
With $600 of this money he bought himself of Captain
Vesey. He was at last his own master, in possession
of a small capital, and of a good trade, carpentry,
which he practiced with great industry. He was
successful, massed in time considerable wealth, became
a solid man of the community in spite of his color,
winning the confidence of the whites, and respect from
the blacks amounting almost to reverence. He
married was much married it was said, which
I see no reason to doubt, in view of the polygamous
example set him by many of the respectabilities of
the master-race in that remarkably pious old slave
town. A plurality of children rose up, in consequence,
to him from the plurality of his family ties; rose
up to him, but they were not his, for following the
condition of the mothers, they were, under the Slave-Code,
the chattels of other men.
This cruel wrong eat deep into Vesey’s
mind. Of course it was most outrageous for him,
a black man, to concern himself so much about the
human chattels of white men, albeit those human chattels
were his own children. What had he, a social
pariah in Christian America, to do with such high
caste things as a heart and natural affections?
But somehow he did have a heart, and it was in the
right place, and natural affections for his own flesh
and blood, like men with a white skin. ’Twas
monstrous in him to be sure, but he could not help
it. The slave iron had entered his soul, and
the wound which it made rankled in secret there.
Not alone the sad condition of his
own children embittered his lot, but the sad condition
of other black men’s children as well. He
yearned to help all to better social conditions to
that freedom which is the gift of God to mankind.
He yearned to possess this God-given boon, in its
fullness and entirety, for himself before he passed
thence to the grave. For he possessed it not.
He had indeed bought himself, but he soon learned
that the right to himself which he had purchased from
his master was not the freedom of a man, but the freedom
accorded by the Slave-Code, to a black man, a freedom
so restrictive in quantity and mean in quality that
no white man, however low, could be made to live contentedly
under it for a day.
In judging this black man, oh! ye
critics and philosophers, judge him not hastily and
harshly before you have at least tried to put yourselves
in his place. You may not even then succeed in
doing him justice, for while he had his faults, and
was sorely tempted, he was, nevertheless, in every
inch of him, from the soles of his feet to the crown
of his head, a man.
At the period which we have now reached
in his history, he was in possession of a fairly good
education was able to read and write, and
to speak with fluency the French and English languages.
He had traveled extensively over the world in his
master’s slave vessel, and had thus obtained
a stock of valuable experiences, and a wide range of
knowledge of men and things of which few inhabitants,
whether black or white, in the slave community of
Charleston, during the first quarter of the nineteenth
century could truthfully have boasted. Yet in
spite of these undeniable facts, in spite of his unquestioned
ability and economic efficiency as an industrial factor
in that city, he was in legal and actual ownership
of precious little of that right to “life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness” which the most
ignorant and worthless white man enjoyed as a birthright.
Wherever he moved or wished to move he was met and
surrounded by the most galling and degrading social
and civil conditions and proscriptions.
True he held a bill of sale of his person, had ceased
to be the chattel property of an individual, but he
still wore chains, which kept him, and which were
intended to keep him and such as him, slaves of the
community forever, deprived of every civil right which
white men, their neighbors, were bound to respect.
For instance, were he wronged in his person or property
by any member of the dominant race, be the offender
man, woman, or child, Vesey could have had no redress
in the courts, in case, the proof of his complaint
or the enforcement of his claim depended exclusively
upon the testimony of himself and of that of black
witnesses, however respectable.
Such a man, we may be sure, was conscious
of the possession, notwithstanding his black skin
and blacker social and civil condition, of longings,
aspirations, which the Slave-Code made it a crime for
him to satisfy. He must have felt the stir of
forces and faculties within him, which, under the
heaviest pains and penalties, he was forbidden to
exercise. Thus robbed of freedom, ravished of
manhood, what was he to do? Ay, what ought he
to have done under the circumstances? Ought he
to have done what multitudes had done before him,
meek and submissive folk, generations and generations
of them, borne tamely like them his chains, without
an effort to break them, and break instead his lion’s
spirit? Ought he to have contented himself with
such a woeful existence, and to have been willing
at its end to mingle his ashes with the miserable dust
of all those countless masses of forgotten and unresisting
slaves? “Never!” replied what was
bravest and worthiest of respect in the breast of
this truly great-hearted man. The burning wrong
which he felt against slavery had sunk in his mind
below the reach of the grappling tongs of reason.
It lay like a charge of giant powder, with its slow
match attachment in the unplumbed depths of a soul
which knew not fear; of a soul which was as hot with
smouldering hate and rage as is a live volcano with
its unvomited flame and lava. As well, under the
circumstances, have tried to subdue the profound fury
of the one with argument, as to quench the hidden
fires of the other with water.
He knew, none better, that his oppressors
were strong and that he was weak; that he had but
one slender chance in a hundred of redressing by force
the wrongs of himself and race. He knew too, that
failure in such a desperate enterprise could have
for himself but a single issue, viz.: certain
death. But he believed that success on the other
hand meant for him and his the gain of that which
alone was able to make their lives worth the living,
to wit.: a free man’s portion, his opportunity
for the full development and free play of all of his
powers amid that society in which was cast his lot.
And for that portion, so precious, he was ready to
take the one chance with all of its tremendous risks,
to stake that miserable modicum of freedom which he
possessed, the wealth laboriously accumulated by him,
and life itself.
It is impossible to fix exactly the
time when the bold idea of resistance entered his
brains, or to say when he began to plan for its realization,
and after that to prepare the blacks for its reception.
Before embarking on his perilous enterprise he must
have carefully reckoned on time, long and indefinite,
as an essential factor in its successful achievement.
For, certain it is, he took it, years in fact, made
haste slowly and with supreme discretion and self-control.
He appeared to have thoroughly acquainted himself
with the immense difficulties which beset an uprising
of the blacks. Not once, I think, did he underestimate
the strength of his foes. A past grand master
in the art of intrigue among the servile population,
he was equally adept in knowledge of the weak spots
for attack in the defences of the slave system, knew
perfectly where the masters could best be taken at
a disadvantage. All the facts of his history
combine to give him a character for profound acting.
In the underground agitation, which during a period
of three or four years, he conducted in the city of
Charleston and over a hundred miles of the adjacent
country, he seemed to have been gifted with a sort
of Protean ability. His capacity for practicing
secrecy and dissimulation where they were deemed necessary
to his end, must have been prodigious, when it is
considered that during the years covered by his underground
agitation, it is not recorded that he made a single
false note, or took a single false step to attract
attention to himself and movement, or to arouse over
all that territory included in that agitation and among
all those white people involved in its terrific consequences,
the slightest suspicion of danger.
In his underground agitation, Vesey,
with an instinct akin to genius, seemed to have excluded
from his preliminary action everything like conscious
combination or organization among his disciples, and
to have confined himself strictly to the immediate
business in hand at that stage of his plot, which
was the sowing of seeds of discontent, the fomenting
of hatred among the blacks, bond and free alike, toward
the whites. And steadily with that patience which
Lowell calls the “passion of great hearts,”
he pushed deeper and deeper into the slave lump the
explosive principles of inalienable human rights.
He did not flinch from kindling in the bosoms of the
slaves a hostility toward the masters as burning as
that which he felt toward them in his own breast.
He had, indeed, reached such a pitch of race enmity
that, as he was often heard to declare, “he
would not like to have a white man in his presence.”
And so, devoured by a supreme passion,
mastered by a single predominant idea, Vesey looked
for occasions, and when they were wanting he created
them, to preach his new and terrible gospel of liberty
and hate. Thus only could he hope to render their
condition intolerable to the slaves, the production
of which was the indispensable first step in the consummation
of his design. Otherwise what possibility of final
success could a contented slave population have offered
him? He needed a fulcrum on which to plant his
lever. He had nowhere in such an enterprise to
place it, but in the discontent and hatred of the slaves
toward their masters. Therefore on the fulcrum
of race hatred he rested his lever of freedom for
his people.
As the discontented bondsmen heard
afresh with Vesey’s ears the hateful clank of
their chains, they would, in time, learn to think of
Vesey and to turn, perhaps, to him for leadership
and deliverance. Brooding over their lot as Vesey
had revealed it to them, they might move of themselves
to improve or end it altogether, by adopting some such
bold plan as Vesey’s. Meantime he would
continue to wait and prepare for that moment, while
they would be training in habits of deceit, of deep
dissimulation, that formidable weapon of the weak
in conflict with the strong, that ars artium
of slaves in their attempts to break their chains a
habit of smiling and fawning on unjust and cruel power,
while bleeds in secret their fiery wound, rages and
plots there also their passionate hate, and glows
there too their no less passionate hope for freedom.
Everywhere through the dark subterranean
world of the slave, in Charleston and the neighboring
country, went with his great passion of hate and his
great purpose of freedom, this untiring breeder of
sedition. And where he moved beneath the thin
crust of that upper world of the master-race, there
broke in his wake whirling and shooting currents of
new and wild sensations in the abysses of that under
world of the slave-race. Down deep below the
ken of the masters was toiling this volcanic man,
forming the lava-floods, the flaming furies, and the
awful horrors of a slave uprising.
Nowhere idle was that underground
plotter against the whites. Even on the street
where he happened to meet two or three blacks, he would
bring the conversation to his one consuming subject,
and preach to them his one unending sermon of freedom
and hate. It was then as if his stern voice,
with its deep organ chords of passion, was saying to
those men: “Forget not, oh my brothers
your misery. Remember how ye are wronged every
day and hour, ye and your mothers and sisters, your
wives and children. Remember the generations
gone weeping and clanking heavy chains from the cradle
to the grave. Remember the oppression of the living,
who with heart-break and death-wounds, are treading
their mournful way in bitter anguish and despair across
burning desert sands, with parched soul and shriveled
minds, with piteous thirsts, and terrible tortures
of body and spirit. Weep for them, weep for yourselves
too, if ye will, but learn to hate, ay, to hate with
such hatred as blazes within me, the wicked slave-system
and the wickeder white men who oppress and wrong us
thus.”
Ever on the alert was he for a text
or a pretext to advance his underground movement.
Did he and fellow blacks for example, encounter a
white person on the street, and did Vesey’s companions
make the customary bow, which blacks were wont to
make to whites, a form of salutation born of generations
of slave-blood, meanly humble and cringingly self-effacing,
rebuking such an exhibition of sheer and shameless
servility and lack of proper self-respect, he would
thereupon declare to them the self-evident truth that
all men were born free and equal, that the master,
with his white skin, was in the sight of God no whit
better than his black slaves, and that for himself
he would not cringe like that to any man.
Should the sorry wretches, bewildered
by Vesey’s boldness and dazed by his terrifying
doctrines, reply defensively “we are slaves,”
the harsh retort “you deserve to remain so,”
was, without doubt, intended to sting if possible,
their abject natures into sensibility on the subject
of their wrongs, to galvanize their rotting souls
back to manhood, and to make their base and sieve-like
minds capable of receiving and retaining, at least,
a single fermenting idea. And when Vesey was thereupon
asked “What can we do?” he knew by that
token that the sharp point of his spear had pierced
the slavish apathy of ages of oppression, and that
thenceforth light would find its red and revolutionary
way to the imprisoned minds within. To the query
“What can we do?” his invariable response
was, “Go and buy a spelling book and read the
fable of Hercules and the Wagoner.” They
were to look for Hercules in their own stout arms
and backs, and not in the clouds, to brace their iron
shoulders against the wheels of adversity and oppression,
and to learn that self-help was ever the best prayer.
At other times, in order to familiarize
the blacks, I suppose, with the notion of equality,
and to heighten probably at the same time his influence
over them, he would select a moment when some of them
were within earshot, to enter into conversation with
certain white men, whose characters he had studied
for his purpose, and during the shuttle-cock and battledore
of words which was sure to follow, would deftly let
fly some bold remark on the subject of slavery.
“He would go so far,” on such occasions
it was said, “that had not his declarations in
such situations been clearly proved, they would scarcely
have been credited.” Such action was daring
almost to rashness, but in it is also apparent the
deep method of a clever and calculating mind.
The sundry religious classes or congregations
with Negro leaders or local preachers, into which
were formed the Negro members of the various churches
of Charleston, furnished Vesey with the first rudiments
of an organization, and at the same time with a singularly
safe medium for conducting his underground agitation.
It was customary, at that time, for these Negro congregations
to meet for purposes of worship entirely free from
the presence of the whites. Such meetings were
afterward forbidden to be held except in the presence
of at least one representative of the dominant race.
But during the three or four years prior to the year
1822, they certainly offered Denmark Vesey regular,
easy and safe opportunities for preaching his gospel
of liberty and hate. And we are left in no doubt
whatever in regard to the uses to which he put those
gatherings of blacks.
Like many of his race he possessed
the gift of gab, as the silver in the tongue and the
gold in the full or thick-lipped mouth are oftentimes
contemptuously characterized. And like many of
his race he was a devoted student of the Bible to
whose interpretation he brought like many other Bible
students, not confined to the Negro race, a good deal
of imagination, and not a little of superstition,
which with some natures is perhaps but another name
for the desires of the heart. Thus equipped it
is no wonder that Vesey, as he pored over the Old Testament
Scriptures, found many points of similitude in the
history of the Jews and that of the slaves in the
United States. They were both peculiar peoples.
They were both Jehovah’s peculiar peoples, one
in the past, the other in the present. And it
seemed to him that as Jéhovah bent his ear, and bared
his arm once in behalf of the one, so would he do the
same for the other. It was all vividly real to
his thought, I believe, for to his mind thus had said
the Lord.
He ransacked the Bible for apposite
and terrible texts, whose commands in the olden times,
to the olden people, were no less imperative upon
the new times and the new people. This new people
was also commanded to arise and destroy their enemies
and the city in which they dwelt, “both man
and woman, young and old, with the edge of the
sword.” Believing superstitiously, as he
did, in the stern and Nemesis-like God of the Old
Testament, he looked confidently for a day of vengeance
and retribution for the blacks. He felt, I doubt
not, something peculiarly applicable to his enterprise,
and intensely personal to himself in the stern and
exultant prophecy of Zachariah, fierce and sanguinary
words which were constantly in his mouth: “Then
shall the Lord go forth, and fight against those nations,
as when he fought in the day of battle.”
According to Vesey’s lurid exegeisis “those
nations” in the text meant, beyond a peradventure,
the cruel masters, and Jéhovah was to go forth to fight
against them for the poor slaves, and on which ever
side fought that day the Almighty God, on that side
would assuredly rest victory and deliverance.
It will not be denied that Vesey’s
plan contemplated the total annihilation of the white
population of Charleston. Nursing for many dark
years the bitter wrongs of himself and race had filled
him, without doubt, with a mad spirit of revenge,
and had so given him a decided predilection for shedding
the blood of his oppressors. But if he intended
to kill them to satisfy a desire for vengeance, he
intended to do so also on broader ground. The
conspirators, he argued, had no choice in the matter,
but were compelled to adopt a policy of extermination
by the necessity of their position. The liberty
of the blacks was in the balance of fate against the
lives of the whites. He could strike that balance
in favor of the blacks only by the total destruction
of the whites. Therefore, the whites, men, women
and children, were doomed to death. “What
is the use of killing the louse and leaving the nit?”
he asked coarsely and grimly on an occasion when the
matter was under consideration. And again he
was reported to have, with unrelenting temper, represented
to his friends in secret council, that, “It was
for our safety not to spare one white skin alive.”
And so it was unmistakably in his purpose to leave
not a single egg lying about Charleston, when he was
done with it, out of which might possibly be hatched
another future slave-holder and oppressor of his people.
“Thorough” was in truth, the merciless
motto of that terrible man.
All roads, on the red map of his plot,
led to Rome. Every available instrument which
fell in his way, he utilized to deepen and extend his
underground agitation among the blacks. Wherefore
it was that he seized upon the sectional struggle
which was going on in Congress over the admission
of Missouri, and pressed it to do service for his cause.
The passionate wish, unconsciously perhaps, colored
if it did not create the belief on his part, that
the real cause of that great debate in Washington,
and excitement in the country at large, was a movement
for general emancipation of the slaves. It was
said that he went so far in this direction as to put
it into the heads of the blacks that Congress had
actually enacted an emancipation law, and that therefore
their continued enslavement was illegal. Such
preaching must have certainly added fresh fuel to
the deep sense of injury, then burning in the breasts
of many of the slaves, and must have operated also
to prepare them for the next step which Vesey’s
plan of campaign contemplated, viz.: a resort
to force to wrest from the whites the freedom which
was theirs, not only by the will of Heaven, but as
well by the supreme law of the land.
A period of underground agitation,
such as Vesey had carried on for about three or four
years, will, unless arrested, pass naturally into
one of organized action. Vesey’s movement
reached, in the winter of 1821-22, such a stage.
As far as it is known, he had up to this time done
the work of agitator singlehanded and alone. Singlehanded
and alone he had gone to and fro through that under
world of the slave, preaching his gospel of liberty
and hate. But about Christmas of 1821, the long
lane of his labors made a sharp turn. This circumstance
tended necessarily to throw other actors upon the
scene, as shall presently appear.
The first step taken at the turn of
his long and laborious lane was calculated to put
to the utmost test his ability as a leader, as an arch
plotter. For it was nothing less momentous than
the choice by him of fit associates. On the wisdom
with which such a choice was made, would depend his
own life and the success of his undertaking. Among
thousands of disciples he had to find the right men
to whom to entrust his secret purpose and its execution
in co-operation with himself. The step was indeed
crucial and in taking it he needed not alone the mental
qualities which he had exhibited in his rôle of underground
agitator, viz.: serpent-like cunning and
intelligence under the direction of the most alert
and flexible discretion, but as well a practical and
profound knowledge of the human nature with which
he had to deal, a keen and infallible insight into
individual character.
It is not too much to claim for Denmark
Vesey, that his genius rose to the emergency, and
proved itself equal to a surpassingly difficult situation,
in the singular fitness of the five principal men on
whom fell his election to associate leadership, with
himself, and to the work of organizing the blacks
for resistance. These five men, who became his
ablest and most efficient lieutenants, were Peter Poyas,
Rolla and Ned Bennett, Monday Gell and Gullah Jack.
They were all slaves and, I believe, full-blooded
Negroes. They constituted a remarkable quintet
of slave leaders, combined the very qualities of head
and heart which Vesey most needed at the stage then
reached by his unfolding plot. For fear lest
some of their critics might sneer at the sketch of
them which I am tempted to give, as lacking in probability
and truth, I will insert instead the careful estimate
placed upon them severally by their slave judges.
And here it is: “In the selection of his
leaders, Vesey showed great penetration and sound
judgment. Rolla was plausible and possessed uncommon
self-possession: bold and ardent, he was not to
be deterred from his purpose by danger. Ned’s
appearance indicated that he was a man of firm nerves
and desperate courage. Peter was intrepid and
resolute, true to his engagements, and cautious in
observing secrecy where it was necessary; he was not
to be daunted nor impeded by difficulties, and though
confident of success, was careful against any obstacles
or casualties which might arise, and intent upon discovering
every means which might be in their favor if thought
of beforehand. Gullah Jack was regarded as a
sorcerer, and as such feared by the natives of Africa,
who believe in witchcraft. He was not only considered
invulnerable, but that he could make others so by
his charms; and that he could and certainly would
provide all his followers with arms. He was artful,
cruel, bloody; his disposition in short was diabolical.
His influence among the Africans was inconceivable.
Monday was firm, resolute, discreet and intelligent.”
From this picture, painted by bitter
enemies, who were also their executioners, could any
person, ignorant of the circumstances and the history
of those men, possibly guess, with the exception of
Gullah Jack, to what race the originals belonged,
or think you, that such a person would so much as
dream that they were in fact, as they were in the eye
of the law under which they lived, nothing more than
so many human chattels, subject like cattle to the
caprice and the cruelty of their owners?
Such nevertheless was the remarkable
group of blacks on whom had fallen Vesey’s choice.
And did they not present an assemblage of high and
striking qualities? Here were coolness in action,
calculation, foresight, plausibility in address, fidelity
to engagements, secretiveness, intrepid courage, nerves
of iron in the presence of danger, inflexible purpose,
unbending will, and last though not least in its relations
to the whole, superstition incarnate in the character
of the Negro conjurer. Masterly was indeed the
combination, and he had no ordinary gift for leadership,
who was able to hit it off at one surprising stroke.
As the work of organized preparation
for the uprising advanced, Vesey added presently to
his staff two principal and several minor recruiting
agents, who operated in Charleston and in the country
to the North of the city as far as the Santee, the
Combahee, and Georgetown. Their exploitation
in the interest of the plot extended to the South into
the two large islands of James and John’s, as
well as to plantations across the Ashley River.
Vesey himself, it was said, traveled southwardly from
Charleston between seventy and eighty miles, and it
was presumed by the writers that he did so on business
connected with the conspiracy, which I consider altogether
probable. He had certainly thrown himself into
the movement with might and main. We know, that
its direction absorbed finally his whole time and
energy. “He ceased working himself at his
trade,” so ran the testimony of a witness at
his trial, “and employed himself exclusively
in enlisting men.”
The number of blacks engaged in the
enterprise was undoubtedly large. It is a sufficiently
conservative estimate to place this number, I think,
at two or three thousand, at least. One recruiting
officer alone, Frank Ferguson, enlisted in the undertaking
the slaves of four plantations within forty miles
of the city; and in the city itself, it was said that
the personal roll of Peter Poyas embraced a membership
of six hundred names. More than one witness placed
the conjectural strength of Vesey’s forces as
high as 9,000, but I am inclined to write this down
as a gross overestimate of the people actually enrolled
as members of the conspiracy.
Here is an example of the nice calculation
and discretion of the man who was the soul of the
conspiracy. It is contained in the testimony of
an intensely hostile witness, a slave planter, whose
slaves were suspected of complicity in the intended
uprising.
“The orderly conduct of the
Negroes in any district of country within forty miles
of Charleston,” wrote this witness, “is
no evidence that they were ignorant of the intended
attempt. A more orderly gang than my own is not
to be found in this State, and one of Denmark Vesey’s
directions was, that they should assume the most implicit
obedience.”
Take another instance of the extraordinary
aptitude of the slave leaders for the conduct of their
dangerous enterprise. It illustrates Peter’s
remarkable foresight and his faculty for scenting danger,
and making at the same time provision for meeting
it. In giving an order to one of his assistants,
said he, “Take care and don’t mention it
(the plot) to those waiting men who receive presents
of old coats, &c., from their masters or they’ll
betray us.” And then as if to provide doubly
against betrayal at their hands, he added “I’ll
speak to them.” His apprehension of disaster
to the cause from this class was great, but it was
not greater than the reality, as the sequel abundantly
proved. Let me not, however, anticipate.
If there were immense difficulties
in the way of recruiting, there were even greater
ones in the way of supplying the recruits with proper
arms, or with any arms at all for that matter.
But vast as were the difficulties, the leaders fronted
them with buoyant and unquailing spirit, and rose,
where other men of less faith and courage would have
given up in despair, to the level of seeming impossibilities,
and to the top of a truly appalling situation.
Where were they, indeed, to procure arms? There
was a blacksmith among them, who was set to manufacturing
pike-heads and bayonets, and to turning long knives
into daggers and dirks. Arms in the houses of
the white folks they designed to borrow after the
manner of the Jews from the Egyptians. But for
their main supply they counted confidently upon the
successful seizure, by means of preconcerted movements,
of the principal places of deposit of arms within
the limits of the city, of which there were several.
The capture of these magazines and storehouses was
quite within the range of probability, for every one
of them was at the time in a comparatively unprotected
state. Two large gun and powder stores, situated
about three and a half miles beyond the Lines, and
containing nearly eight hundred muskets and bayonets,
were, by arrangement with Negro employees connected
with them, at the mercy of the insurgents whenever
they were ready to move upon them. The large
building in the city, where was deposited the greater
portion of the arms of the State, was strangely neglected
in the same regard. Its main entrance, opening
on the street, consisted of ordinary wooden doors,
without the interposition between them and the public
of even a brick wall.
In the general plan of attack, the
capture of this building, which held tactically the
key to the defense of Charleston, in the event of a
slave uprising, was assigned to Peter Poyas, the ablest
of Vesey’s lieutenants. Peter, probably
disguised by means of false hair and whiskers, was
at a given signal at midnight of the appointed day,
to move suddenly with his band upon this important
post. The difficulty of the undertaking lay in
the vigilance of the sentinels doing a duty before
this building, and its success depended upon Peter’s
ability to surprise and slay this man before he could
sound the alarm. Peter was confident of his ability
to kill the sentinel and capture the building, and
I think that he had good ground for his confidence.
In conversation with an anxious follower, who feared
lest the watchfulness of the guard might defeat the
attempt, Peter remarked that he “would advance
a little distance ahead, and if he could only get
a grip at his throat he was a gone man, for
his sword was very sharp; he had sharpened it, and
made it so sharp it had cut his finger.”
And as if to cast the last lingering doubt out of his
disciple in regard to his (Peter’s) ability
to fix the sentinel, he showed him the bloody cut
on his finger.
Other leaders, at the head of their
respective bands, were at the same time, and from
six different quarters, to attack the city, surprising
and seizing all of its strategical points, and the
buildings, where were deposited its arms and ammunition.
A body of insurgent horse was, meanwhile, to keep
the streets clear, cutting down without mercy all
white persons, and suspected blacks, whom they might
encounter, in order to prevent the whites from concentrating
or spreading the alarm through the doomed town.
Such was Denmark Vesey’s masterly and merciless
plan of campaign in bare outline for the capture of
Charleston, a plan, which, with such a sagacious head
as was Vesey, was entirely feasible, and which would
have, undoubtedly, succeeded but for the happening
of the unexpected at a critical stage of its execution.
Against such an occurrence as was this one, no man
in Vesey’s situation, however supreme might
have been his ability as a leader, could have completely
provided. The element of treachery could not
by any device have been wholly eliminated from his
chapter of accidents and chances. To do what he
set out to do, with the means at his disposition,
Vesey had of necessity to take the tremendous risk
of betrayal at the hand of some black traitor.
It was, in reality, sad to relate his greatest risk,
and became the one insurmountable barrier in the way
of his final success.
Sunday at midnight of July 14, 1822,
was fixed upon originally as the time for beginning
his attack upon the city. But about the last of
May, owing to indications that the plot had been discovered,
he shortened the period of its preparation, and appointed
instead midnight of Sunday, June 16th, of the same
year. His reason for selecting the original date
illustrates his careful and astute attention to details
in making his plans. He had noted that the white
population of Charleston was subject, to a certain
extent, to regular tidal movements; that at one season
of the year this movement was at high tide, and that
at another it was at low tide. It was no great
difficulty, under the circumstances, for a man like
Denmark Vesey to forecast with reasonable accuracy
these recurrent movements, and natural enough that
he should have planned his attack with reference to
them. And this was exactly what he did when he
appointed July 14th as the original date for beginning
the insurrection. At that time the city was less
capable than at an earlier date to cope with a slave
uprising, owing to the departure in large numbers from
it, for summer resorts, of its wealthier classes.
Again his selection of the first day
of the week in both instances was equally the result
of careful calculation on his part, as on that day
large bodies of slaves from the adjacent plantations
and islands were wont to visit the town without molestation,
whereas on no other day could this have been done.
Thus, without exciting alarm, did Vesey plan to introduce
his Trojan horse or country bands into the city, where
they were to be concealed until the hour for beginning
the attack.
But the attack, carefully planned
as it was, did not take place. For the thing
which Peter Poyas feared, and had vainly endeavored
to provide against, came to pass. One of those
very “waiting men,” for whom Peter entertained
such deep distrust, and against whom he had raised
his voice in sharp warning, betrayed to his master
the plot, the secret of which had been communicated
to him by an overzealous convert, whose discretion
was shorter than his tongue. All this happened
on the morning of the 30th of May, and by sunset of
that day the secret was in possession of the authorities
of the city. Precautionary measures were quickly
taken by them to guard against surprise, and to discover
the full extent of the intended uprising.
Luckily for the conspirators the information
given by the traitor was vague and general. Nor
was the city able to elicit from the informant of
this man, who had been promptly arrested and subjected
to examination, any disclosures of a more specific
or satisfactory character. He was, in truth,
in possession of but few particulars of the plot, and
was therefore unable to give any greater definiteness
to the government’s stock of knowledge relative
to the subject. Suspicion, however, lighted on
Peter Poyas and Mingo Harth, one of Vesey’s
minor leaders. They were, thereupon apprehended,
and their personal effects searched, but nothing was
found to inculpate either, except an enigmatical letter
not understood by the authorities at the time.
This circumstance, coupled with the coolness and consummate
acting of the pair of suspected leaders, perplexed
and deceived the authorities to such a degree that
they ordered the discharge of the prisoners.
But the fright and anxiety of the city were not so
readily got rid of. They held Charleston uneasy
and apprehensive of danger, and so kept it suspicious
and watchful.
Things remained in this state of watchfulness
anxiety, on both sides, for about a week. Vesey
on his part remitted nothing of his preparations for
the coming 16th of June, but pushed them if possible
with increased vigor and secrecy. He held the
while nocturnal meetings at his house on Bull street,
where modified arrangements for the execution of his
plans were broached and matured. How he dared
at this juncture to incur such extreme hazard of detection,
it is difficult to understand. But he and his
confederates were men of the most indomitable purpose,
and took in the desperate circumstances, in which
they were then placed, the most desperate chances.
They had to. They could not do otherwise.
The city on its side, was listening
during a part of this same week to a second confession
of that poor fellow whose tongue had outmeasured his
discretion. It was listening with reviving dread
to the wild and incoherent disclosures of this man,
whom it had flung into the black hole of the workhouse.
There, crazed by misery and fear of death, he raved
about a plot among the blacks to massacre the whites
and to put the town to fire and pillage. This
second installment of William Paul’s excited
disclosures, while it increased the sense of impending
peril, did not put the government in better position
to avert it. For groping in the dark still, it
knew not yet where or whom to strike. But in this
period of horrible suspense and uncertainty its suspicion
fell on another one of Vesey’s principal leaders.
This time it was on Ned Bennett that the city’s
distrustful eye fastened. Like that game which
children play where the object of search is hidden,
and where the seekers as they approach near and yet
nearer to the place of concealment, grow warm and
then warmer, so was the city, in its terrible search
for the source of its danger, growing hot and hotter.
That was, indeed, a frightful moment for the conspirators
when Ned Bennett became suspected. The city,
as the children say in their game, was beginning to
burn, for it seemed as if it must at the next move,
thrust its iron hand into that underground world where
the plot was hatching, and clutching the heart of
the great enterprise, snatch it, conspiracy and conspirators,
into the light of day. But it was at such a tremendous
moment of danger, that the leaders, unawed by the
imminency of discovery, took a step to throw the city
off of their scent, so daring, dextrous and unexpected
as to knock the breath out of us.
Ned Bennett, whom the city was watching
as a cat, before springing, watches a mouse, went
voluntarily before the Intendant or Mayor of the city,
and asked to be examined, if so be he was an object
of suspicion to the authorities. Ned was so surprisingly
cool and indifferent, and wore so naturally an air
of conscious innocence, that the great man was again
deceived, and the city was thus thrown a second time
out of the course of its game. Ned’s arrest
and examination were postponed, as the authorities
in their perplexity were afraid to take at the time
any decisive action, lest it might prove premature
and abortive. And so lying on its arms, the city
waited and watched for fresh developments and disclosures,
while the insurgent leaders, in their underground world
watched warily too, and pushed forward with undiminished
confidence their final preparations, when they would,
out of the dark, strike suddenly their liberating
and annihilating blow. This awful state of suspense,
of the most watchful suspicion and anxiety on one side,
and of wary and anxious preparations on the other,
continued for about five or six days, when it was
ended by a second act of treachery emanating from
the distrusted class of “waiting men,”
whose highest aspirations did not seem to reach above
their masters’ cast off garments.
Unlike the first, the information
furnished to the authorities by the second traitor,
was not lacking in definiteness. For this fellow
knew what he was talking about. He knew almost
all of the leaders, and many particulars connected
with the plot. The city was thus placed in possession
of the secret. It knew now the names of the ringleaders.
But confident, apparently, of its ability to throttle
the intended insurrection, it allowed two days to
pass and the 16th of June, without making any arrests.
Cat-like it crouched ready to spring, while it followed
the unconscious movements of the principal conspirators.
For Vesey and his principal officers were at that
time, ignorant of the second betrayal, and therefore
of the fact that they were from the 14th of June at
the mercy of the police. On Saturday night, June
15th, an incident occurred, however, which warned
them that they were betrayed, and that disaster was
close at hand. This incident revealed as by a
flash of lightning the hopelessness of their position.
On that day Vesey had instructed one of his aids,
Jesse Blackwood, to go into the country in the evening
for the purpose of preparing the plantation slaves
to enter the city on the day following, which was
Sunday, June 16th, the time fixed for beginning the
insurrection. Jesse was unable to discharge this
mission, either on Saturday night or Sunday morning,
owning to the increased strength and vigilance of the
city police and of its patrol guard. He had succeeded
on Sunday morning in getting by two of their lines,
but at the third line he was halted and turned back
into the city. When this ominous fact was reported
to the Old Chief, Vesey became very sorrowful.
He and the other leaders must have instantly perceived
that they were caught, as in a trap, and that the end
was near. It was probably on this Sunday that
they destroyed their papers, lists of names and other
incriminating evidence. The shadow of the approaching
catastrophe deepened and spread rapidly around and
above them as they watched and waited helplessly under
the huge asp of slavery, which enraged and now completely
coiled, was about to strike. The stroke fell
first on Peter, Rolla, Ned, and Batteau Bennett.
The last, although but a boy of eighteen, was one
of the most active of the younger leaders of the plot.
Vesey was not captured until the fourth day afterward.
So secret and profound had been his methods of operations
in the underground world, that the early reports of
his connection with the conspiracy, were generally
discredited among the whites. Jesse Blackwood
was taken the next day, and four days later, on June
27th, Monday Gell was arrested. Gullah Jack eluded
the search of the police until July 5th, when he too
was struck by the huge slave asp.
In all, there were one hundred and
thirty-one blacks arrested, sixty-seven convicted,
thirty-five executed, and thirty-seven banished beyond
the limits of the United States. Five of these
last were of the class of suspects, whom it was thought
best to get rid of. Of the whole number of convictions,
not one belonged to the bands of either Vesey, or
Peter, or Rolla, or Ned, and but few to that of Gullah
Jack’s. Absolutely true did these five
leaders prove to their vow of secrecy, and so died
without betraying a single associate. This alas!
cannot be said of Monday Gell, who brave and loyal
as he was throughout the period of his arrest and
trial, yet after sentence of death had been passed
upon him, and under the influence of a terror-stricken
companion, succumbed to temptation, and for the sake
of life, consented to betray his followers. Denmark,
Peter, Rolla, Ned, Batteau, and Jesse, were hanged
together, July 2, 1822. Ten days later Gullah
Jack suffered death on the gallows also. Upon
an enormous gallows, erected on the lines near Charleston,
twenty-two of the black martyrs to freedom were executed
on the 22nd day of the same ill-starred month.
A curious circumstance connected with
this plot was the high regard in which the insurgents
were held by the whites. But instead of my own,
I prefer to insert in this place the remarks of the
slave judges on this head. In their story of
the plot they observed: “The character and
condition of most of the insurgents were such as rendered
them objects the least liable to suspicion. It
is a melancholy truth, that the general good conduct
of all the leaders, except Gullah Jack, had secured
to them not only the unlimited confidence of their
owners, but they had been indulged in every comfort
and allowed every privilege compatible with their
situation in the community; and although Gullah Jack
was not remarkable for the correctness of his deportment,
he by no means sustained a bad character. But
not only were the leaders of good character and much
indulged by their owners, but this was generally the
case with all who were convicted, many of them possessed
the highest confidence of their owners, and not one
of bad character.”
Comment on this significant fact is
unnecessary. It contains a lesson and a warning
which a fool need not err in reading and understanding.
Oppression is a powder magazine exposed always to the
danger of explosion from spontaneous combustion. Verbum
sat sapienti.
Another curious circumstance connected
with this history, was the trial and conviction of
four white men, on indictments for attempting to incite
the slaves to insurrection. They were each sentenced
to fine and imprisonment, the fines ranging from $100
to $1,000, and the terms of imprisonment, from three
to twelve months.
And now for the concluding act of
this tragedy, for a final glance at four of its black
heroes and martyrs as they appeared to the slave judges
who tried them, and to whose hostile pen we are indebted
for this last impressive picture of their courage,
their fortitude and their greatness of soul.
Here it is: “When Vesey was tried, he folded
his arms and seemed to pay great attention to the
testimony, given against him, but with his eyes fixed
on the floor. In this situation he remained immovable,
until the witnesses had been examined by the court,
and cross-examined by his counsel, when he requested
to be allowed to examine the witnesses himself.
He at first questioned them in the dictatorial, despotic
manner, in which he was probably accustomed to address
them; but this not producing the desired effect, he
questioned them with affected surprise and concern
for bearing false testimony against him; still failing
in his purpose, he then examined them strictly as
to dates, but could not make them contradict themselves.
The evidence being closed, he addressed the court
at considerable length When he received his
sentence the tears trickled down his cheeks.”
I cannot, of course, speak positively
respecting the exact nature of the thought or feeling
which lay back of those sad tears. But of this
I am confident that they were not produced by any
weak or momentary fear of death, and I am equally
sure that they were not caused by remorse for the
part which he had taken, as chief of a plot to give
freedom to his race. Perhaps they were wrung
from him by the Judas-like ingratitude and treachery,
which had brought his well-laid scheme to ruin.
He was about to die, and it was Wrong not Right which
with streaming eyes he saw triumphant. Perhaps,
in that solemn moment, he remembered the time, years
before, when he might have sailed for Africa, and there
have helped to build, in freedom and security, an
asylum for himself and people, where all of the glad
dreams of his strenuous and stormy life might have
been realized, and also how he had put behind him the
temptation, “because” as he expressed it,
“he wanted to stay and see what he could do
for his fellow creatures in bondage.” At
the thought of it all, the triumph of slavery, the
treachery of black men, the immedicable grief which
arises from wasted labors and balked purposes, and
widespreading failures, is it surprising that in that
supreme moment hot tears gushed from the eyes of that
stricken but lion-hearted man?
But to return to the last picture
of the martyrs before their judges: “Rolla
when arraigned affected not to understand the charge
against him, and when it was at his request further
explained to him, assumed with wonderful adroitness,
astonishment, and surprise. He was remarkable
throughout his trial, for great presence of composure
of mind. When he was informed he was convicted
and was advised to prepare for death, though he had
previously (but after his trial) confessed his guilt,
he appeared perfectly confounded, but exhibited no
signs of fear. In Ned’s behavior there
was nothing remarkable, but his countenance was stern
and immovable, even whilst he was receiving the sentence
of death; from his looks it was impossible to discover
or conjecture what were his feelings. Not so
with Peter, for in his countenance were strongly marked
disappointed ambition, revenge, indignation, and an
anxiety to know how far the discoveries had extended,
and the same emotions were exhibited in his conduct.
He did not appear to fear personal consequences, for
his whole behavior indicated the reverse: but
exhibited an evident anxiety for the success of their
plan, in which his whole soul was embarked. His
countenance and behavior were the same when he received
his sentence, and his only words were on retiring,
’I suppose you’ll let me see my wife and
family before I die,’ and that not in a supplicating
tone. When he was asked a day or two after, if
it was possible he could wish to see his master and
family murdered who had treated him so kindly, he only
replied to the question by a smile.”
The unquailing courage, the stern
fidelity to engagements, and the spirit of devotion
and self-sacrifice which characterized so signally
the leaders of this slave plot, culminated, it seems
to me, in the unbending will and grandeur of soul
of Peter Poyas, during those last, tragic days, in
Charleston. I doubt if in six thousand years the
world has produced a finer example of fortitude and
greatness of mind in presence of death, than did this
Negro slave exhibit in the black hole of the Charleston
workhouse, when conversing with his Chief and Rolla
and Ned Bennett, touching their approaching death,
and the safety of their faithful and forlorn followers,
he uttered thus intrepid injunction: “Do
not open your lips! Die silent as you shall see
me do.” Such words, considering the circumstances
under which they were spoken, were worthy of a son
of Sparta or of Rome, when Sparta and Rome were at
their highest levels as breeders of iron men.
It is verily no light thing for the
Negroes of the United States to have produced such
a man, such a hero and martyr. It is certainly
no light heritage, the knowledge, that his brave blood
flows in their veins. For history does not record,
that any other of its long and shining line of heroes
and martyrs, ever met death, anywhere on this globe,
in a holier cause or a sublimer mood, than died this
Spartan-like slave, more than three quarters of a
century ago.
May some future Rembrandt have the
courage, as the genius, to paint that tragic and imposing
scene, with its deep shadows and high lights as I
see it now, the dark and hideous dungeon, the sombre
figures and grim faces of the four glorious black
martyrs, with Peter in the midst, speaking his deathless
words: “Do not open your lips! Die
silent as you shall see me do.”
“Right forever on the scaffold,
Wrong forever on the Throne,
Yet that scaffold sways the future,
And, behind the dim unknown,
Standeth God within the shadow,
Keeping watch above His own.”