BREFFU, The Queen of St. John and Leader of the 1733 Slave Rebellion

06 Oct, 2023

Did you know that Breffu was an Akwamu leader of the 1733 slave insurrection on St. John (St. Jan) in Danish West Indies and that she later committed suicide with 23 other rebels to evade capture as the rebellion weakened in 1734?

Breffu, an African woman from what is now the nation of Ghana, who was enslaved in the Danish West Indies, is credited with leading one of the longest recorded slave revolts in North American history.

Denmark began its involvement in the African slave trade in 1657. Fifteen years later in 1672, after defeating the local Taino Indians, they began colonizing three West Indies Islands, naming them St. Jan (now St. John), St. Thomas, and St. Croix, the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands.) These islands soon became the center for three cash crops: sugar cane, cotton, and coffee. Plantations were established, sugar mills were built, and enslaved people were brought from West Africa to provide the labor for these enterprises.

By the beginning of the eighteenth century, the Danish West India and Guinea Company focused its slave trading operations in and around the city of Accra in what is now Ghana. The Akwamu people of the Akan region had defeated the Accra and enslaved the conquered tribal members before selling them to the Dutch. Eventually the Akwamu were defeated by the Akyem people after the death of their ruler, King Ansa Sasraku and by 1730, many Akwamu people, now enslaved, were sold to Danish slave traders and transported to the island of St. John, in the Danish West Indies.

Late in 1733, in retaliation for rough treatment and harsh living conditions, enslaved people across the island of St. John, including many newly arrived Akwamu, fled their plantations and hid in the woods where they planned a revolt. They were organized by members of the Akwamu royal family who had also been enslaved and were residing on different plantations. The leaders included Prince June, Prince Kanta, King Bolombo, Prince Aquashie, and Princess Breffu who was enslaved on the plantation of Pieter Kroyer in Coral Bay, St. John.

Early on November 23, 1733, slave insurrections begun on St. John island. A local magistrate, Johannes Sodtmann was killed at his Coral Bay plantation. Soon afterwards enslaved people were admitted into Fort Fredericksvaern to make their regular delivery of wood, and once inside, they killed the guards with knives previously hidden inside of delivered wood. 

At the sound of the cannon being fired at the fort, the pre-set signal, Breffu burst into the main house of the Kroyer plantation and killed both Kroyer and his wife. Breffu and her followers took all the guns and ammunition on the Kroyer plantation and then attacked the neighboring Van Stell plantation where they killed three members of that family.

Some slave masters were able to get off the island on boats and the Akwamu people gained control of most of the territory. Under the leadership of Breffu, the plan of taking over the plantations was successful until the early part of 1734.

With Breffu as their leader, the Akwamu people took control of most of St. John Island, destroying homes and burning crops. The insurrection lasted until early in April 1734 when the French military agreed to help the Danes regain control of the island. 

In late April, Breffu and twenty-three of her followers committed suicide in a ritual ceremony on Brown’s Bay to avoid capture. By May, French soldiers had crushed the rebellion and Dutch plantation owners returned to their properties. 

The last Akwamu rebels were killed by August the same year, ending the nine-month slave rebellion. Breffu is remembered as the “Queen of St. John” and is celebrated annually with a parade and re-enactment of the insurrection.

Breffu has been dramatised as the "Queen of St John" in the play Three Queens Chautauqua Series: Act I Queen Breffu. In a 2006 production, Breffu was portrayed by the academic Jaweh David. She has also featured as a subject in festival floats at St John celebrations.

Source: Wikipedia | Blackpast

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