Posted on July 3, 2017

Notice that I said "the Americas," plural, not "America." I'm talking about the slave trade and slave labor in North and South America, including Central America and the Caribbean. Here are just a few of the countries whose economies once depended partly on African slave labor:
Brazil,
Bahamas,
Venezuela,
Belize,
Haiti,
Dominican Republic,
Mexico,
Colombia,
Guyana,
and of course the United States, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The U.S. Virgin Islands used to be the Danish West Indies - three Caribbean islands ruled by Denmark from the mid-1700s to the early 1900s. Danes brought enslaved Africans to the islands to work the sugar plantations.
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The blowing of the conch signaled the beginning of the rebellion led by Gottlieb. |
A freed slave and skilled craftsman named Moses Gottlieb, who lived on St. Croix, went by the name General Buddhoe. Apparently he organized a lot of the slaves on the western end of the island, and together they marched on the town of Fredericksted. This rebellion caused the Governor-General of the Danish colony to emancipate (free) all of the slaves.
Because emancipation was announced in Fredericksted, this town is nicknamed Freedom City.
Check out Freedom City:
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Stilt walking! |