Page:W. E. B. Du Bois - The Gift of Black Folk.pdf/163

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The Gift of Black Folk
151


Gage himself was captured by a mulatto corsair who was sweeping the seas in his own ship.[1]

The history of these Maroons reads like romance.[2] When England took Jamaica, in 1565, they found the mountains infested with Maroons whom they fought for ten years and finally, in 1663, acknowledged their freedom, gave them land and made their leader, Juan de Bolas, a colonel in the militia. He was killed, however, in the following year and from 1664 to 1778 some 3,000 black Maroons were in open rebellion against the British Empire. The English fought them with soldiers, Indians, and dogs and finally again, in 1738, made a formal treaty of peace with them, recognizing their freedom and granting them 25,000 acres of land. The war again broke out in 1795 and blood-hounds were again imported. The legislature wished to deport them but as they could not get their consent, peace was finally made on condition that the Maroons surrender their arms and settle down. No sooner, however, had they done this than the whites treacherously seized 600 of them and sent them to Nova Scotia. The Legislature voted a sword to the English general, who made the treaty; but he indignantly refused to accept it. Eventually these

  1. J. Kunst, Negroes in Guatemala, Journal of Negro History, Vol. I, pp. 392-8.
  2. Cf. Bryan Edward’s West Indies, 4th Edition, Vol. I, pp. 337-98.