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Date published: 2/16/2005
Gabriel Prosser had great plans to free slaves and establish a new government. His rebellion may have included as many as 10,000 slaves, from Caroline County to Richmond, who would kill their masters with clubs, scythes and homemade bayonets.
The plan called for one group to set fire to Richmond buildings—to distract whites—while another seized guns from the armory. But on the day of the planned attack, Aug. 30, 1800, two slaves told their masters. The governor called in the militia. As the rebels congregated outside Richmond, torrential rains flooded roads and washed out bridges. Prosser postponed the attack a day, but had lost the element of surprise, and the slaves dispersed. Prosser wasn’t among the first group of 30 slaves executed. The man who was inspired by biblical accounts of Israel’s delivery from slavery escaped to Norfolk. He was betrayed by other slaves for the $300 reward on his head and was hanged in October.
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