| Great Negro Plot Of 1741 |
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In March and April of 1741 , a series of fires erupted in Lower Manhattan , the most significant one within the walls of Fort George . After one fire, a black man was arrested after having been seen fleeing it. Two other slaves, were also arrested at the time, one of whom was a 16-year old white indentured servant, Mary Burton. In exchange for her freedom, she testified against the others as participants in a supposedly growing conspiracy of poor Whites and Blacks to burn the city. The two slaves were burned at the stake, and with "fire licking at their feet", confessed to burning the fort. They also named fifty others as co-conspirators. News of the "conspiracy" set off a stampede of arrests. At the height of the hysteria, nearly half the city's male slaves over sixteen were in jail. The number of arrests totaled 152 Blacks and twenty Whites. They were tried and convicted in a Show Trial . A Catholic priest, John Ury , was suspected of instigating it. {Link without Title} Most of the convicted were hanged or burnt- how many is uncertain. The bodies of two supposed ringleaders, one Black and one White, were gibbeted. Their corpses were left to rot in public. Seventy-two were deported from New York, sent to Newfoundland and to various islands in the West Indies and the Madeiras. REFERENCES
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