Summary Of Nat Turner Rebellion

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This book covered a story of someone who had a clean vision of what it felt like to be free. Nat Turner’s skillful plan of a slave rebellion was succeeded by the influence of religion amongst African Americans and by his status amongst white Americans. Unawareness and anxiety were the effects of Turner’s rebellion on white Americans which eventually led to a number of consequences for slaves.
As we all know slavery was a vital part of life in the South and Virginia in the 1800s. Plantation owners and farmers who owned slaves, this was a status symbol in this time. To society, slavery was a way to control a race which meant that African Americans would not be able to rebel because they would be too busy giving service to their higher beings or “masters”. Despite this control, slaves were still allowed their own churches and schools but were guarded by armed guards to make …show more content…

Turner was born into slavery with an associated leadership in his African heritage. This leadership was portrayed by figurative birthmarks that his family associated it with. Nat also possessed some supernatural abilities and was somehow aware of things that happened before his own birth. Turner was very intelligent, a very unusual intelligence of an African American compared to young white children and slaves. This gave him an advantage and he was given a chance to acquire reading skills and study the Bible. His parents believed that his capabilities were beyond that of a regular slave. So they decided to put Nat’s intelligence to work and encouraged him to show off his literacy with their white friends. Even though this Turner’s thought this was going to be a good idea, it was really just an attack that was unintentional. Nat Turner eventually got older and had to work in the fields just as any other slave. This was a very difficult time for him because he had hope that he would be freed one