Nat Turner's Slave Revolt: Woodcut Illustration
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Description: 

This illustration was a woodcut made in 1831 after the uprising that describes the different stages of the Nat Turner Slave RebellionIt shows different parts to try and depict the rebellion and how awful the slaves were. The image is meant to show Nat Turner killing his owner (Number 2) as well as an innocent mother and children (Number 1). Number 3 in the image is showing a white man showing resist to the attack. Finally, Number 4 is showing how soldiers of whites are stopping the attack and chasing the rebels into the woods.  

This picture is significant to the slave rebellion because of how it depicted all slaves after the killings and what they were capable ofIt was used as propaganda in the South in order to make slaves look angry and dangerous. This helped caused additional oppression for slaves based on the aftermath of the new rules. For example, after that night hundreds of slaves were beaten and killed just because of the fear that the rebellion brought to slave owners. The article works in the south by trying to make all slaves out as evil making the South come out with more laws and rules to ensure nothing like this would happen again.  

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Timeline of Events Associated with Nat Turner's Slave Revolt: Woodcut Illustration

Nat Turner's Slave Revolt

21 Aug 1831 to 23 Aug 1831

On August 21, 1831 Nat Turner started his Slave Revolt in Southampton County, Virgina that lasted for two daysNat and seven of his supporters started by killing his owner with knives, axes, and hatchets as the family slept. They then took guns and horses from the house and got 75 other slaves to help which allowed them kill about 55 white people. With such little numbers though he was doomed when the local slave owners began to fight back with firearms and the state militia arrived with 3,000 men ending the revolt 

After the revolt many of his supporters were beaten and killed in the streets by white locals. Turner managed to escape into the woods and lived out there for about 70 days until he was captured, tried, and hung for the revolt. The revolt struck fear in the Southern states resulting in harder laws against slaves.  

 

Sources: 

History.com Editors. (2009, December 02). Nat Turner. Retrieved October 11, 2020, from www.history.com/topics/black-h… 

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. (2020, September 28). Nat Turner. Retrieved October 11, 2020, from www.britannica.com/biography/N… 

Nat Turner's Slave Revolt

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