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  2. Three Fingered Jack (Jamaica) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Fingered_Jack_(Jamaica)

    Three-Fingered Jack a.k.a. Jack Mansong (died c. 1781), led a band of runaway slaves in the Colony of Jamaica in the eighteenth century.. Many historians believed that after the Jamaican Maroons signed treaties with the British colonial authorities in 1739 and 1740, the treaty-signatories effectively prevented runaway slaves from forming independent communities in the mountainous forests of ...

  3. Jamaican Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_Maroons

    These runaway slaves formed informal maroon communities, modelled along the lines of the official Maroon communities before they came to terms. [42] [43] In the 18th century, Maroons also hunted and killed notorious escaped slaves and their deputies, such as Ancoma, Three Fingered Jack, and Dagger. However, while they were successful in ...

  4. Underground Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_Railroad

    Freedom seekers (runaway slaves) escaping slavery and seeking freedom hid in the basement of Downing's restaurant. [60] Enslaved people helped freedom seekers escape from slavery. Arnold Gragstone was enslaved and helped runaways escape from slavery by guiding them across the Ohio River for their freedom. [61]

  5. Slavery in the British and French Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_the_British_and...

    To help protect their investments, most slave owners would not immediately give the hardest tasks to the newest slaves. Slave owners would also set up a walled area away from the veteran slaves in order to stymie the spread of disease. These areas would contain 100–200 slaves at any time.

  6. Cudjoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cudjoe

    The self-liberated Africans were called Maroons, after the Spanish word cimarrón, meaning “runaway slave”. [6] The Leeward Maroons most likely emerged in 1690 when there was a Coromantee rebellion on Sutton's estate in western Jamaica, and most of these enslaved Africans ran away to form the Leeward Maroons. [7]

  7. Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maroons

    When runaway slaves and Amerindians banded together and subsisted independently they were called "maroons". On the Caribbean islands , they formed bands and on some islands, armed camps. Maroon communities faced great odds against their surviving the attacks by hostile colonists, [ 19 ] obtaining food for subsistence living, [ 20 ] as well as ...

  8. Cuffee (Jamaica) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuffee_(Jamaica)

    Cuffee was an escaped slave in Jamaica who led other runaway slaves to form a community of free black people in Jamaica in the island's forested interior, and they raided white plantation owners at the end of the eighteenth century.

  9. Free Villages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Villages

    Founded as a Free Village for emancipated slaves, it was a mid-1830s initiative of the congregation of the Baptist pastor Rev. Thomas Burchell, whose deacon was Sam Sharpe, executed in 1832 after the Baptist War slave rebellion until he died for the cause of abolition and freedom. Today the Free Village's playing field is named 'Burchell Field ...