Samuel Sharpe (ca. 1780-1832)

August 16, 2013 
/ Contributed By: Andre Wooten

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Samuel Sharpe on the $50 Jamaican Banknote|

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Samuel “Sam” Sharpe (or “Daddy Sharpe”) led a rebellion which led to the end of legal slavery in the British colony of Jamaica.  Records of who his parents were have been lost.  Sharpe was a slave of an English attorney and namesake who practiced in Montego Bay.

Sharpe was baptized and subsequently became a lay deacon and leader of the congregation at the Burchell Baptist Church.  Because the British allowed slaves to hold religious meetings, Sharpe started preaching about freedom from slavery. In 1831 the British Parliament began discussing the abolition of slavery throughout the Empire, and that displeased many Jamaican planters. Sharpe followed the Parliament arguments by reading local and foreign newspapers, and he made certain his congregation was apprised of the latest news concerning the abolition debates.

In December 1831, under the mistaken belief that freedom had already been granted to Jamaica’s enslaved people by the British Parliament and that local planters refused to abide by the decision, Sharpe organized a protest.  That rebellion was timed to have maximum impact on the sugar cane harvest because Sharpe knew that if the cane was not cut, most of the island’s crops would be ruined.

Since Christmas Day 1831 fell on Sunday, a rest day, Sharpe assumed that the workers were entitled to both Monday (Boxing Day) and the following Tuesday off. Sharpe and his followers vowed not to work until they were paid for that day’s work.  The strike soon spread to other parishes including St. James, Trelawny, and Westmoreland, and to some sections of St. Elizabeth Parish.

Sharpe’s strike did not go according to the initial plan of a passive but firm resistance.  On December 28 1831, when the British militia marched on the protesters, the Kensington Estate Great House was set on fire.  The rebellion lasted eight days and cost the lives of 186 slaves and 14 white overseers or planters.

Over 500 slaves were convicted of participating in the rebellion. Many were hanged and their heads were severed and placed around their plantations as a warning against future rebellions. Those who escaped the death penalty were treated brutally.

Sharpe was named the key figure of the rebellion. He surrendered to save Baptist Missionaries blamed for the revolt, and was eventually hanged in Montego Bay on May 23, 1832. Sharpe’s owners were paid £16.00 (about $20) for their “loss of property.”

Sharpe was buried like a criminal in the sands of Montego Bay Harbor, but his remains were later recovered and buried beneath the pulpit at the Burchell Baptist Church.

In 1975, independent Jamaica honored Sam Sharpe when the Teachers’ College founded in 1975 by the Ministry of Education was named in his honor. The square in Montego Bay where he was executed is now called Samuel Sharpe Square.

Author Profile

Andre’ S. Wooten has unique experience studying and teaching U.S. Constitutional history and African-American History and traveling to many parts of the world communicating with varieties of people.

After obtaining a B.A. in world history at Reed College in 1971, and graduating from the University of Washington Law School in 1975, Atty. Wooten went to work for KCTS Channel 9 TV, the Educational Public television station in Seattle, where he shot documentaries and community affairs news programs.

Andre’ Wooten began practicing law as a deputy Corporation Counsel for the City of Seattle in from 1976-1980; and taught African-American History and Constitutional Law, for the University of Washington Black Studies Department from 1978-1980. He made his first trip to West Africa then visiting Cameroon, Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Senegal. In 1978 my daughter Alexis Kira Wooten was born.

Andre’ Wooten moved to the Big Island in 1980 taught at Hilo and Pahoa High Schools and worked for the Hawaii State Dept. Of Human services. He later established a litigation practice in Civil Rights, Criminal Defense, Personal Injury and Real Estate law in Honolulu in 1985. Past president of the African American Lawyers Association of Hawaii, which he co- founded in 1987, to successfully lobbied the legislature for the appointment of the first black judge in Honolulu.

In 1988, as president of the Afro-American Association of Hawaii, he helped form a community coalition which successfully lobbied the Hawaii State legislature for passage of the Martin Luther King, Jr. State holiday and the Hawaii Civil Rights Commission.

Since 1988, Andre’ has published numerous articles on History and politics in Newspapers in Honolulu, lectured in various colleges, military bases and Universities in Hawaii, and appeared scores of times in television programs in Honolulu discussing facts of the historical impact of the International African diaspora and civil rights issues.

In 1995 he and his wife formed Amen Rasta I Production Enterprises, which creates, produces and distributes educational International African history & music videos world wide. Beginning with video he shot of the Nile Valley civilizations of Nubia, KMT-Egypt, and, Kush

Over the years he has researched, traveled, shot and produced documentaries showing the history, art and culture of Ghana in West Africa, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Brazil in South America, Fiji in The South Pacific, Cuba and Jamaica in the Carribean. Since moving to Hawaii in 1980, Atty. Andre’ Wooten has taught in the public high schools of the Big Island and lectured on African and American history, law and politics at the University of Hawaii, Chaminade University, Wayland Baptist College, Kaneohe Marine Base, Schofield Army Barracks, Pearl Harbor Naval Base and before numerous community groups.

In December 2002, a Hawaii Federal Jury awarded Atty Wooten’s client, Umar RAHSAAN, $1,055,000.00 in damages. The largest civil rights violation award for a black person in Hawaii history.

And in 2005 he settled, a Civil Rights case, Chadd Eaglin vs. University of Hawaii Medical School. The U of H Medical school had never admitted a first year African American male student and had only graduated one black male student ever in 30 years. While passing over this qualified Big Island born Afro-Hawaiian male candidate, for both regular admissions and for “special Affirmative Action” admission, twice. Part of the settlement brought in local African American Doctors to the UH admissions screening process.

Wooten has real estate business interests in Hawaii, Washington, Texas and Jamaica.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Wooten, A. (2013, August 16). Samuel Sharpe (ca. 1780-1832). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/global-african-history/sharpe-samuel-ca-1780-1832/

Source of the Author's Information:

Jamaican National Library http://www.nlj.gov.jm/content/sam-sharpe-1; Junius P. Rodriguez, ed. Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood, 2006); Delroy Reid-Salmon, Burning for Freedom: A Theology of the Black Atlantic Struggle for Liberation (Kingston, W.I. Ian Randle Publishers, 2012).

Further Reading