OppressionJanuary 1822
South Carolina Crushes Black Freedom After Vesey
After the Vesey conspiracy, South Carolina enacted sweeping repression: Black churches — including Emanuel AME where Vesey organized — were closed or placed under white supervision. Free Black seamen from northern states were jailed upon arrival in SC ports (the Negro Seamen Acts). Assemblies of Black people were banned. The state executed 35 men on evidence that would not survive modern scrutiny.