Berbice Slave Uprising
Berbice Slave Uprising
Berbice Slave Uprising
Map showing the area of the rebellion. The bottom right sector, between the Berbice
and Corentyne Rivers was the epicenter of slave rebellions at the time
Coffy, accepted by all the rebels as the leader of the rebellion, then
declared himself Governor of Berbice, and set up his administration at
Hollandia and Zeelandia. He selected Akara as his deputy, and set
about drilling his troops and establishing discipline. Two other leaders
who emerged were Atta and Accabre, the latter being very disciplined
and military-conscious. Other military leaders included Cosala and
Goussari. Work gangs among the Africans were also organised to farm
the estate lands to produce food supplies to sustain the population.
Meanwhile, the Dutch Governor, Van Hoogenheim and other whites at
Fort Nassau, were undecided on what they should do. The Governor
wanted to defend the colony, but the Court of Policy voted for
abandonment. Morale was indeed very low. Finally on the 8th March
1763 Fort Nassau was abandoned after the buildings were burned and
the cannons spiked. The Whites travelled by boats to Fort St. Andries
which Van Hoogenhiem quickly found to be inadequate, both for
housing and for defense, since there were no provision grounds and
running fresh water. He had preferred to stop at Dageraad, a
plantation about 10 miles down the river from Fort Nassau, but the
others did not agree.
At Fort St. Andries, Van Hoogenheim had just agreed to allow the
Whites to abandon Berbice, when an English ship with 100 soldiers
arrived from Suriname. Van Hoogenheim immediately withdrew his
decision to abandon the colony and began to re-organise its defense.
He dispatched 25 soldiers to Plantation Fredericksburg up the Canje
and left a small group with two ships to guard the mouth of the
Berbice River. With the remaining larger group, he along with
volunteers among the Whites sailed up with three armed ships to
Dageraad.
There Van Hoogenheim fortified the previously abandoned buildings
and arranged the three ships so that their guns would defend this new
defense position. The rebels, led by Akara, immediately launched three
successive attacks on the Whites but they were driven back.
Coffy, who did not approve these attacks, immediately after, on the
2nd April 1763, wrote to Van Hoogenheim saying that he did not want a
war with the Whites. He also proposed the partition of Berbice between
the Whites and Blacks with the Whites occupying the coastal area, and
the Blacks the interior.
In the meantime, the Governor sent a group of two loyal slaves and
two Amerindians to Suriname for assistance. Help was also sought
from Essequibo-Demerara. Stalling for time and hoping for
reinforcements to arrive from the other Dutch colonies, he wrote back
to Coffy saying that he had sent the partition proposal to Holland and
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"The Governor (Coffy) was present when it commenced, and was very
angry at it. The Governor of Berbice asks Your Excellency that Your
Excellency will come and speak with him; don't be afraid but if you
won't come, we will fight as long as one Christian remains in Berbice.
"The Governor will give Your Excellency one half of Berbice, and all the
Negroes will go high up the river, but don't think they will remain
slaves. Those Negroes that Your Excellency has on the ships - they can
remain slaves.
The Governor greets Your Excellency."
Maintaining his delaying tactics, the Governor continued to insist in his
correspondence to Coffy that he was still awaiting a response to
partition proposal from Holland.
Meanwhile, by the end of March, the Director General of EssequiboDemerara, Laurens Storm van Gravesande had received information
about the rebellion and he instructed the Commander of Demerara to
seek assistance from the Caribs, Arawaks and Akawaios to mount an
attack on the Berbice rebels from the south. Gravesande also wrote to
the Zeeland Chamber and the Directors of the Berbice Association in
Holland, and the Governor of St. Eustatius seeking military assistance
for the Whites in Berbice. Eventually, two well-armed ships with 158
soldiers arrived in Berbice.
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By this time, Coffy lost his patience with Van Hoogenheim, and on the
13th May 1763 he agreed to an attack on Dageraad. His forces
numbered about 2,000 while the Whites had about 150 armed men.
The three ships in the river maintained a steady firing of their heavy
guns on the attackers and by mid- afternoon, they were forced to
withdraw after suffering a loss of 58 dead. Eight Whites died during
this battle.
After this defeat, Coffy wrote to Van Hoogenheim again offering his
partition proposal which he hoped would bring peace with honour. In a
very firm statement, he insisted that "in no case will we be slaves
again."
But the defeat of the Blacks helped to open up divisions in their ranks.
Those who had been field-slaves began to express disapproval of
Coffy, who was a house-slave. Atta was the leader of this "field-slave"
faction. Tribal jealousies also emerged and fights broke out between
members of different tribes. Creole Blacks also at times attacked those
who recently arrived from Africa. These divisions seriously undermined
the military strength of the rebels and helped to encourage the Whites
to regroup their forces.
Interestingly, soon after their arrival, a group of Dutch soldiers,
including Jene Renaud and Sergeant de Niesse who had mutinied and
deserted the post on the Courantyne, were captured and employed by
the rebels to train the troops and make weapons. Coffy used them for
training his forces, and some even led small bands of the rebels in
guerrilla attacks on plantations controlled by the Whites. (Initially, due
to distrust, some of these Dutch deserters were killed by the Africans).
But from the beginning, Coffy encountered difficulties with his forces
since some sections felt that by defeating the Whites meant that they
could now act as they pleased. Small groups roamed across the
countryside plundering abandoned estates, while some others spent
most of their time drinking rum and dressing up in European clothing
plundered from the plantations.
A number of Creole slaves - those born in the colony - did not
wholeheartedly support the rebellion, and they gave up themselves to
plantations which were far removed from the area of rebel activity.
Meanwhile the differences between Coffy and Atta continued to grow
and eventually Atta challenged him for the leadership. The opposing
supporters fought each other and after Atta's faction won, Coffy killed
his own close supporters before shooting himself.