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Enslaved women central in the fight for freedom
Opinion

Enslaved women central in the fight for freedom

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Last updated: March 8, 2026 11:58 am
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Published: March 8, 2026
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Contents
Stono Rebellion (1739)Gabriel’s Rebellion (1800)German Coast UprisingLa Amistad Rebellion

Revolt did not begin and end with a single sermon in Virginia or a planned uprising in Charleston. It lived in plantation quarters, kitchens, ship holds, prayer meetings, and whispered conversations between cabins.

As Black History Month closes, we celebrate resistance in masculine terms — revolt, fire, uprising, execution. As Women’s History Month begins, we must widen the frame. The architecture of resistance was not male alone. It was communal — and women were indispensable to its design.

If you read traditional accounts, you would assume these rebellions were male-led, male-driven events.

That assumption is incomplete.

Women were central — as planners, fighters, informants, protectors, logisticians, and spiritual anchors.

They were less visible in court records because colonial authorities were more likely to execute men publicly and record their names. Executions were spectacles. Trials were documented. Male bodies were displayed as warnings. Women were punished differently — whipped, branded, sold, imprisoned, or quietly executed. Their stories were preserved less frequently.

But when you look closely, women were everywhere.

Stono Rebellion (1739)

The Stono Rebellion is remembered as the largest slave uprising in the British mainland colonies. Most narratives focus on male fighters marching south toward Spanish Florida.

But women were present in the networks that enabled the revolt. Some joined the march. Others provided shelter, information, or food before and during the uprising. After the rebellion was crushed, colonial punishment records show women were whipped, branded, and sometimes executed for suspected involvement.

Their participation did not always take the form of wielding a weapon. But rebellion requires infrastructure. Women helped build that infrastructure.

Gabriel’s Rebellion (1800)

Gabriel Prosser gets the spotlight in accounts of the planned Richmond uprising. He was a blacksmith, literate, politically aware, and inspired by the language of the American Revolution.

But conspiracies do not spread themselves.

Enslaved women passed messages between plantations. They concealed weapons. Some recruited others through kinship networks. Because women moved between households as cooks, seamstresses, and domestic workers, they became crucial communication channels.

When the conspiracy was uncovered, women were interrogated and punished. Their names appear less frequently in headlines, but they appear in the records of suspicion and fear.

Rebellion requires secrecy. Secrecy requires trust. Women often carried both.

German Coast Uprising

The 1811 German Coast Uprising in Louisiana was the largest slave revolt in U.S. history by number of participants. It is often described as male-led.

Yet plantation records indicate that women helped supply food and clothing to rebels. Some provided cover stories. After suppression, women were interrogated as suspected conspirators.

In Louisiana’s Afro-Creole culture, women held leadership roles in spiritual and community life. Mobilization grows from networks of meaning, ritual, and shared identity — spaces where women were central.

Across the South, enslaved women working in kitchens sometimes poisoned enslavers. Poison was a recognized form of resistance. Women were accused — and often executed — for alleged poisoning conspiracies.

These acts were strategic adaptations to constraint.

Where guns were inaccessible, proximity became power.

Women assigned to kitchens had access to food preparation. They understood household routines and vulnerability. In a system that denied them weapons, some used what they had.

La Amistad Rebellion

The revolt aboard La Amistad is usually told as male-led. Sengbe Pieh (Cinqué) is remembered.

But women were among the captives who survived the Middle Passage. They endured imprisonment in the United States during the legal battle that followed. They resisted through refusal, testimony, solidarity, and survival.

On many slave ships, women sometimes had more mobility than men because they were not always shackled below deck in the same way. That mobility occasionally allowed for communication and coordination during mutinies.

Survival itself was resistance.

Consider Marie-Jeanne Lamartinière of the Haitian Revolution — the most successful slave revolt in the Atlantic world. She fought alongside her husband at the Battle of Crête-à-Pierrot in 1802, reportedly dressed in uniform, loading and firing cannons, moving through smoke and gunfire.

History preserved the names of generals. It less often preserved the names of women who fought beside them.

Her presence reminds us: armed resistance was not exclusively male.

In documented cases in New York, Virginia, Louisiana, and elsewhere, enslaved women set fire to slaveholders’ homes, attacked overseers, attempted to poison masters, and participated in escape plots.

Some killed their own children rather than see them enslaved.

That reality is devastating. But it reflects how women understood the system’s brutality. They knew what sexual exploitation, forced labor, sale, and generational bondage meant. Their decisions were shaped by that knowledge.

If resistance was a moral response to dehumanization, enslaved women were not peripheral actors. They were moral agents.

Women preserved African religious practices. They led prayer meetings. They interpreted dreams and signs. They encouraged collective courage. They sustained songs, stories, and memory.

Enslavement sought to break identity. Women often preserved it.

Without hope, there is no uprising. Without shared meaning, there is no solidarity. Women sustained the interior life of resistance.

Enslaved women lived under dual oppression: racialized enslavement and systematic sexual violence.

Their resistance carried distinct risks. A man might be executed. A woman might be executed — or tortured, raped, sold away from her children, or subjected to forced reproductive control.

And yet they resisted anyway.

As we move from Black History Month into Women’s History Month, remembering these women is not an act of inclusion. It is an act of correction.

When we widen the lens, the story becomes more accurate.

When it becomes more accurate, it becomes more honest.

And when it becomes more honest, it becomes more just.

Ed Gaskin is Executive Director of Greater Grove Hall Main Streets and founder of Sunday Celebrations

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