History

Africans in Barbados Rebelled Against Slavery This Day in 1816

The year was 1816 – the location, Bridgetown, capital of the British colony at Barbados. Sugar cane grew well in the tropical Caribbean islands and fetched high prices for landowners in the European and American markets. Under the guidance of the Dutch – who colonized the island before the British – and a group of Sephardic Jews, Barbados became one of the biggest sugar producers in the region.

Indentured servitude, the system of selling one’s labor for a fixed time period to pay a debt, was used early in the sugar industry’s development. This involved mainly Europeans agreeing to work off their transportation costs to the “New World”.

During the second half of the 17th century, however, African slaves were used increasingly so that “by 1680 there were seventeen slaves for every indentured servant… by 1700, there were 15,000 free whites and 50,000 enslaved blacks,” according to a Wiki on the subject. Most of them came to Barbados from three regions in Africa: the Bight of Biafra and Gulf of Guinea islands, the Bight of Benin, and the Gold Coast. This includes members of the Igbo, Efik, Akan, Ewe, Fon, and Kongo ethnic groups.

There were a few early rebellions as slave codes designed to limit the freedom and rights of the Africans took root in the Barbados, but they were quickly put down. According to an educational page created by the British archives,
“Slave rebellions tended to be less threatening in Barbados than on other Caribbean islands. Barbados had a well-armed police force and there was nowhere to hide. Unlike Jamaica, which still had forests, most of the land in Barbados had been cultivated to produce as much sugar as possible.”

After nearly 150 years of bondage, however, the majority black population thought freedom was finally around the corner. The British government had outlawed the slave trade in 1807, but did not go the extra step of freeing those already in slavery. Anticipation of liberty peaked among the Afro-Bajans in 1815, when according to the British archives:
“the slaves thought that they were going to gain their freedom when Governor Leith returned from Guadeloupe, another Caribbean island. They believed that he was bringing a ‘free paper’ with him to set them free.”

Line art by Everett of slaves working in sugar cane on a Caribbean plantation. (Photo: Fine Art America)

That didn’t happen. Within a year, the enslaved Afro-Bajans rose up against the slave masters. Planning for the rebellion began in February. Among its leaders was a man named Bussa and a woman named Nanny Griggs, not to be confused with Nanny of the Jamaican maroons, which are another group of enslaved people who fought their way to freedom.

Bussa was born a free man in West Africa – many believe he came from the Igbo people in Nigeria. Sold into slavery in the late 1700s, he worked as a Ranger on a large plantation in the Barbados. Rangers acted as a sort of go-between to carry out the slave master’s wishes when it came to the other slaves. This gave Bussa plenty of opportunity to travel between plantations without being questioned. After all, the slaves given such positions of authority were generally very loyal to their masters.

Nanny Griggs was a domestic or “house slave” who could read and according to The Abolition Project, “told her followers that the only way to obtain freedom was to fight for it.”

After much planning and coordination among slaves on the various plantations, the rebels swung into action on Easter Sunday, which fell on April 14 of that year. Fighting began at Bayley’s Estate, where Bussa had been in bondage. More than 400 men and women fought under Bussa’s command. Fighting for the British and colonial powers were another group of black men – British soldiers known as the West India Regiment. By April 15, martial law had been declared on the entire island and would not be lifted for three months.

Defeat met the insurrectionists on April 16, as Bussa was killed in battle and the superior weapons of the British and colonial armed forces eventually overwhelmed them. The British Archives records the final outcome of the uprising as follows:
“One white civilian and one black soldier were killed during the fighting. Compared to this, 50 enslaved people died in battle and 70 were executed in the field. Another 300 were taken to Bridgetown for trial, of which 144 were executed and 132 sent away to another island.”

Bussa’s rebellion did not succeed in freeing the Afro-Bajans from bondage, but it became known as the first of three “late-stage rebellions” in the British West Indies, which demonstrated the serious desire of the slaves to be free. The second rebellion erupted in Demerara (now Guyana) in 1823, with the last and largest occurring in Jamaica in 1831-32. The British government finally abolished slaveholding two years later, in 1834.

Bussa’s legacy went largely unrecognized in public until 1985, when the Bajan government erected a statue in his honor. In 1998, he was listed among the Barbados 10 most influential people.

Bussa’s insurrectionists carried a similar flag during their uprising. (Photo: National Archives UK)

Deidre Gantt

Deidre R. Gantt is a journalist, essayist, poet, and playwright who uses these forms mainly to explore and express personal and collective trauma, healing, and empowerment in the African Diaspora. Her work has appeared in numerous websites, newspapers and anthologies and on stages throughout the United States as well as in Canada and Ghana. She is also the author of Border Crossing: a poetic memoir, which chronicles her upbringing in Washington, D.C. and experiences as a transplant in New Orleans, Louisiana and returnee in Ghana's central region.

View Comments

  • Black people across the globe are connected through history. This is a great history lesson for many. Keep em coming!!

  • It is more likely that Bussa came from a small town on the Niger river named Bussa or Boussa as the traders would not have asked him his name but would name him according to the location from which he was taken. What must be remembered also is that although about 400 enslaved people took part in the rebellion 1,000 were slaughtered by the militiamen some of whom were black (the Bourbon regiment). Bussa must have been intelligent, charasmatic, compassionate and a lot more. Why? He started working in the fields, became a driver, then worked in the plantation house and then became a ranger. To have achieved this as a "black" slave direct from Africa and not as a "creole" must have taken some doing and speaks volumes about his personality. Even after he was killed during the early part of the rebellion his followers who kept on fighting continued to shout his name. Bussa! Bussa! Bussa.

  • Great story, one issue. The British authorities forcibly sent thousands of Irish and Scottish people to Barbados, particularly after the Cromwellian wars. There was nothing voluntary about it. Voluntary indenture was more a factor in the US, the pale skin of the Irish and Scots was little suited to field working in Barbados - they burnt easily (thus Redlegs).

    • Under the guidance of the Dutch – who colonized the island before the British ? Barbados was only colonized by the English from Feb. 17, 1627 uninterrupted until Nov.30, 1966. The Dutch tried in 1665 to capture Barbados, however they were repelled by the guns of the coastal fortifications. Prior to the English the only occupiers were the Amerindians who lived on island for 4000 years until the 1400s when the Europeans entered the Western Hemisphere.

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