Nat Turner (1800–1831) was known to his local “fellow servants” in Southampton County as “The Prophet.” On the evening of Sunday, August 21, 1831, he met six associates in the woods at Cabin Pond, and about 2:00 a.m. they began to enter local houses and kill the white inhabitants. Over the next 36 hours, they were joined by as many as 60 other enslaved and free Negroes, and they killed at least 10 men, 14 women, and 31 infants and children. By noon of Tuesday, August 23, the insurgents had been killed, captured, or dispersed by local militia. Nat Turner escaped until October 30, when he was caught in the immediate vicinity, having used several hiding places over the previous 9½ weeks. The next day he was delivered to the county sheriff and ...
The King James Version has come to be understood as an integral part of the English canon, serving n...
Slave narratives influenced nineteenth-century American religious culture and history; through the s...
A reading of Thomas Higginson's account of Nat Turner's 1832 anti-slavery uprising and Thomas Hobbes...
Nat Turner (1800–1831) was known to his local “fellow servants” in Southampton County as “The Prophe...
Nat Turner (1800–1831) was known to his local “fellow servants” in Southampton County as “The Prophe...
Nat Turner was hanged 30 years before the firing on Fort Sumter, but the slave rebellion that bears ...
"A bold new interpretation of Nat Turner and the slave rebellion that stunned the American South. In...
UnrestrictedNat Turner and his 1831 Southampton County, Virginia slave rebellion leave a mythic foot...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
The Nat Turner uprising in Virginia in August 1831 was, in its consequences if not in the actual num...
Being primarily concerned with the safety of their wives and children, however, they felt it necessa...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
Recognizing a breadth of intellectual and creative works on Nat Turner but no extended conversation ...
Photocopy. Iowa City, University of Iowa Photoduplication ServiceCover title.Conspiracy of the black...
Includes discussion questions; Includes excerpt from The resurrection of Nat Turner, part 2, The tes...
The King James Version has come to be understood as an integral part of the English canon, serving n...
Slave narratives influenced nineteenth-century American religious culture and history; through the s...
A reading of Thomas Higginson's account of Nat Turner's 1832 anti-slavery uprising and Thomas Hobbes...
Nat Turner (1800–1831) was known to his local “fellow servants” in Southampton County as “The Prophe...
Nat Turner (1800–1831) was known to his local “fellow servants” in Southampton County as “The Prophe...
Nat Turner was hanged 30 years before the firing on Fort Sumter, but the slave rebellion that bears ...
"A bold new interpretation of Nat Turner and the slave rebellion that stunned the American South. In...
UnrestrictedNat Turner and his 1831 Southampton County, Virginia slave rebellion leave a mythic foot...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
The Nat Turner uprising in Virginia in August 1831 was, in its consequences if not in the actual num...
Being primarily concerned with the safety of their wives and children, however, they felt it necessa...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
Recognizing a breadth of intellectual and creative works on Nat Turner but no extended conversation ...
Photocopy. Iowa City, University of Iowa Photoduplication ServiceCover title.Conspiracy of the black...
Includes discussion questions; Includes excerpt from The resurrection of Nat Turner, part 2, The tes...
The King James Version has come to be understood as an integral part of the English canon, serving n...
Slave narratives influenced nineteenth-century American religious culture and history; through the s...
A reading of Thomas Higginson's account of Nat Turner's 1832 anti-slavery uprising and Thomas Hobbes...