Also American
Resistancec. 1710

Poisoning as Resistance — Documented Cases 1700s

Colonial court records from Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia document numerous cases of enslaved people accused of poisoning enslavers and their families. Enslaved healers and herbalists possessed knowledge of toxic plants unavailable to European colonists. South Carolina passed a specific law in 1751 making poisoning by an enslaved person a capital offense, confirming the scale of the practice.