1832: Samuel Sharpe, “I would rather die upon yonder gallows than live in slavery”
2 comments May 23rd, 2009 Headsman
On this date in 1832, Jamaican national hero Samuel Sharpe died upon the gallows for instigating the slave revolt that would (help to) end slavery.
Samuel Sharpe, an educated slave who was also a Baptist deacon, was the moving spirit behind the attempted general strike that became the Christmas Rebellion.
That time of year was less than festive for Jamaica’s enormous slave population, for Saint Nick opened the short window for harvesting the island’s sugar cane.
Samuel Sharpe and collaborators had the wit to realize that being depended upon to bring in the cash crop that made life comfortable for their owners put the slaves’ hands upon a potent economic lever. In the last few days of 1831, they pressed it.
The “passive resistance” thing didn’t last long, however, and the “strike” transmuted into a rebellion — the cause swiftly taken up by thousands of slaves around the island who torched crops. Given the small (less than 20) white body count,* the “violence” appears to have been directed against the instruments, rather than the perpetrators, of their enslavement.
Not so the reprisals.
The rebellion was suppressed within days, and over 300 put to death for it (in addition to 200 slave casualties during the pacification itself).
Sharpe was the last of those executed.
But his revolt is widely thought to have given impetus to the British parliament’s deliberations over the ensuing months that ultimately led to the Slavery Abolition Act (1833).
Sharpe, today, is an official national hero of Jamaica. The place in Montego Bay that he hanged is known as Sam Sharpe Square, and his face adorns the currency.

* Contrast with the much smaller, much bloodier rebellion of Nat Turner in the U.S., which preceded the Christmas Rebellion by a few months.
Also On This Date
Possibly Related Executions
- 1803: Robert Emmet, “let no man write my epitaph”
- 1859: John Brown’s body starts a-moulderin’ in the grave
- 1885: Louis Riel, Metis leader
Entry Filed under: 19th Century, Capital Punishment, Cycle of Violence, Death Penalty, England, Execution, Famous, Famous Last Words, Hanged, History, Jamaica, Martyrs, Occupation and Colonialism, Power, Public Executions, Religious Figures, Revolutionaries
Tags: 1830s, 1832, christmas rebellion, christmas uprising, currency, economics, may 23, montego bay, samuel sharpe, slave revolt, slavery, slavery abolition act

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