The Confessions Of Nat Turner: Negro Slave

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Nat Turner: negro slave priest, born on October 2, 1800 to slave owner Benjamin Turner on a Virginia plantation. Dissimilar than other slaves and the consent from his owner, Benjamin, Nat, educated in writing, reading, and focused hard on religion with such simplicity. Developing from his religious acquiring, he was to do something more than that of a slave. Although, Nat Turner’s rebellion wasn’t accomplished for slaves’ freedom, he made a statement to Virginia. Born of abundant sense and raising as he confessed, he would soon become the front-runner of one of the goriest slave uprisings America has ever seen and lead to his hanging fate and even harsher slave laws. These are his confessions…
Since birth Nat commented to Thomas Grey in The Confessions of Nat Turner, “…I had too much sense to be raised, and if I was, I would never be of any service to anyone as a slave.” In common breaks or special moments in Nat’s daily living he would pray and experiment in making paper or gunpowder. He was told at a youthful age t he could translate a story that happened before his birth like he was there, supernatural. His belief: that he was to fight against the whites. Most slaves were remained deliberately illiterate to sustain them from trying to run from their slaves or offer them alternatives …show more content…

After being sold to a new owner that used him as a field slave and Nat thought that his life was more than that of a slave creating violent theories in his head and started the preparation on his chaotic battle. This battle would begin on August 21, 1831, Nat only thirty-one at that time, took the leadership on killing wives, mothers, children, husbands, etc. While only 50-65 whites were killed in the small town of Southampton, Virginia became furious. Nat confesses of the murders to Thomas Gray and creates The Confessions of Nat Turner, in favor to use it against him in