Saturday, May 30, 2026
Village Voice News
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Village Voice News
No Result
View All Result
Home Regional

JAMAICA | The Flames That Shook an Empire: 194 Years Since Sam Sharpe Declared War on Slavery

On December 27, 1831, enslaved Africans in Jamaica didn't stage a rebellion—they launched a war that would bring the British Empire to its knees

Admin by Admin
December 26, 2025
in Regional
Commemorating Sam Sharpe, National Hero: First labour leader, hanged on May 23,1832

Commemorating Sam Sharpe, National Hero: First labour leader, hanged on May 23,1832

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(WiredJA)-MONTEGO BAY, St, James- The flames that consumed Tulloch Castle sugar estate on the night of December 27, 1831, illuminated more than the Jamaican sky. They exposed the fundamental lie at the heart of British colonial economics: that slavery was sustainable, that the enslaved would accept their bondage indefinitely, that freedom could be perpetually deferred.

Sam Sharpe, a Baptist preacher who understood that spiritual liberation demanded physical freedom, orchestrated what British enslavers frantically labeled a “rebellion” in their 1832 petition to the Jamaica House of Assembly.

READ ALSO

Questions mount over J$770 million left unused in Jamaican gov’t aid program

DIASPORA | When ‘America First’ Means Black and Brown Last: The Racial Architecture of Trump’s Immigration Purge

An image of the 31 year old Sam Sharpe by artist Basil Watson

But make no mistake—this was war. Coordinated, strategic, and aimed squarely at the economic jugular of an empire that had built its prosperity on stolen African labor.

What began at Tulloch Castle in Kensington, St. James, spread like wildfire across western Jamaica.

Enslaved Africans armed with machetes and sticks faced down heavily armed British regiments at places like Montpelier, transforming what enslavers dismissed as property into an army fighting for human dignity.

The scale shook the foundations of Jamaica’s plantation economy and sent tremors across the Atlantic to the comfortable chambers of British Parliament.

Victory Came With a Price Tag—For the Wrong People

The Sam Sharpe War accomplished what decades of abolitionist petitions could not: it made slavery too expensive, too dangerous, too politically untenable to maintain.

By August 1833, the British House of Commons passed the Slave Emancipation Act. Freedom was coming—eventually.

But here’s where the mathematics of empire reveal their cruelest logic. Parliament allocated £20 million—a staggering 40% of Britain’s national budget—to compensate plantation owners for their “loss.” The enslaved Africans who had built the wealth these enslavers claimed?

They received exactly nothing. No land. No compensation. No acknowledgment of the generations of unpaid labor that had enriched Britain beyond measure.

And freedom itself came with conditions. The 1833 Act imposed an “apprenticeship” period that extended bondage until midnight on July 31, 1838.

Even in liberation, the formerly enslaved faced meager wages and landlessness, while their former captors pocketed government payments.

Britain wouldn’t finish paying off that debt to enslavers until 2015—meaning descendants of enslaved Africans living in Britain were, through their taxes, paying compensation to the descendants of those who had enslaved their ancestors.

Let that obscenity settle.

The War Continues

Professor Verene A. Shepherd, head of the Centre for Reparation Research at the University of the West Indies, Mona, frames the Sam Sharpe War not as historical artifact but as ongoing struggle.

Social Historian, Professor Verene A. Shepherd who heads the Centre for Reparation Research at the University of the West Indies, Mona.

The war, she argues, was for “emancipation from chattel enslavement and British terrorism”—a mission that remains incomplete nearly two centuries later.

Today’s battles look different but flow from the same source. Jamaica’s debate over transitioning from monarchy to republic isn’t academic constitutional theory—it’s a direct continuation of what Sam Sharpe fought for.

As historian Hilary Beckles notes, true emancipation requires departing from “intellectual timidity” to fulfill the mission of our ancestors.

Marcus Garvey understood this when he declared the need for mental emancipation. Bob Marley immortalized it in “Redemption Song.”

The chains may be invisible now, but they remain. Economic dependency. Educational systems that teach colonial perspectives as objective truth. Commemorations that feel more symbolic than substantive.

From Flames to Official Recognition—and Beyond

It took until 2020 for Jamaica to officially recognize December 27 as Sam Sharpe Day, largely due to former South St. James MP Derrick Kellier’s decades-long advocacy.

Working with the Kensington Citizens Association, Kellier ensured communities—especially youth—learned about their heritage, about battles where their ancestors faced British regiments with courage that should humble us all.

Former Member of Parliament Derrick Kellier

But state sponsorship of a holiday isn’t completion. True commemoration demands we ask uncomfortable questions: What would Sam Sharpe make of our current economic arrangements?

Of our continued participation in systems designed by those who enslaved us?

Of celebrations that honor his sacrifice while leaving fundamental power structures unchanged?

The flames Sam Sharpe lit at Tulloch Castle 194 years ago didn’t just burn sugar cane—they burned away the illusion that slavery was permanent.

Today, we must tend those flames, directing them toward the illusions that still constrain Caribbean sovereignty, economic independence, and genuine self-determination.

Sharpe didn’t fight for symbolic freedom. He fought for the real thing. Anything less dishonors his sacrifice and the thousands who stood with him when the British Empire seemed invincible.

The war isn’t over. We just fight it differently now.

ShareTweetSendShareSend

Related Posts

Regional

Questions mount over J$770 million left unused in Jamaican gov’t aid program

by Admin
May 29, 2026

Jamaican government lawmakers and Opposition members on Wednesday raised alarm after learning that hundreds of millions of dollars allocated to...

Read moreDetails
Senator Andy Kim, center, tried to de-escalate the worsening situation outside Delaney Hall. Credit: Dakota Santiago for The New York Times
Regional

DIASPORA | When ‘America First’ Means Black and Brown Last: The Racial Architecture of Trump’s Immigration Purge

by Admin
May 28, 2026

Black Agenda Report’s Margaret Kimberley names the thing that polite media won’t: white supremacy is not a by-product of Trump’s...

Read moreDetails
IN A CELEBRATORY MOOD: Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar makes a joyful noise as she celebrates on Saturday at the UNC’s congress meeting and one-year anniversary celebration in Couva. —Photo: JERMAINE CRUICKSHANK
Regional

PM willing to extend SoE again

by Admin
May 28, 2026

THE state of emergency (SoE) will be extended by another three months if this is recommended by the National Security...

Read moreDetails
Next Post

JAGS Aviation Brings Christmas Cheer to Paruima


EDITOR'S PICK

China advocates peaceful resolution to Iran nuclear issue

July 23, 2025
Philippine journalist Maria Ressa

Nobel Peace Prize: Maria Ressa attacks social media ‘toxic sludge’

December 12, 2021
John Campbell batting in the 2024 Edition of the CG United Super 50 Cup

CWI WITHDRAWS PENALTY ON JOHN CAMPBELL FOLLOWING TRIBUNAL REVIEW

April 6, 2025

Opposition Leader Arrested: Guyana’s Political Turmoil Intensifies with Working People’s Alliance Executive Member’s Arrest

April 2, 2023

© 2024 Village Voice

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Village Voice