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      • The 1811 German Coast uprising was a revolt of slaves in parts of the Territory of Orleans on January 8–10, 1811. The uprising occurred on the east bank of the Mississippi River in what is now St. John the Baptist, St. Charles and Jefferson Parishes, Louisiana.
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  2. The 1811 German Coast uprising was a revolt of slaves in parts of the Territory of Orleans on January 8–10, 1811. The uprising occurred on the east bank of the Mississippi River in what is now St. John the Baptist, St. Charles and Jefferson Parishes, Louisiana.

  3. Jan 8, 2016 · Two hundred and five years ago, on the night of January 8, 1811, more than 500 enslaved people took up arms in one of the largest slave rebellions in U.S. history.

  4. On the evening of 8 January 1811, at the age of thirty-one, Deslondes led a band of rebels downriver on River Road. They began in Norco and continued through the parishes of St. Charles and St. John the Baptist in Louisiana, approximately forty miles from the city of New Orleans.

  5. Mar 12, 2007 · The slave rebellion begin on January 8, 1811, at the Andry plantation in St. John the Baptist Parish when approximately 15 slaves attack plantation owner Manual Andry, wounding him. Despite his wound, Andry escaped and warned whites on surrounding plantations. Rebels also killed his son, Gilbert Tomassin Andry, around the same time.

  6. Named for the owner of the plantation where the uprising occurred, Manual Andry, in the Territory of Louisiana between January 8 and 10, 1811, it “involved approximately 400 to 500 enslaved men and women along the east bank of the Mississippi River north of New Orleans”.

  7. The Louisiana Slave Revolt of 1811 was the largest slave insurrection in the history of the United States. The revolt was carried out by enslaved men and women, house servants and field hands, some born in Louisiana and others recently arrived from Africa and the Caribbean.

  8. Jan. 8, 1811: Louisiana’s Heroic Slave Revolt. Time Periods: 1800. Themes: African American, Racism & Racial Identity, Slavery and Resistance. By Leon A. Waters. One of the most suppressed and hidden stories of African and African American history is the story of the 1811 Slave Revolt.

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