IpHiiip w^m m fslg®Ji«P§ ■ rT^MirWatr^ s«» -iliKNraSRHS p#CJPWwSta®&®THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, IN 1741: CONTAINING A FULL ACCOUNT OF THE BURNING OF THE FORT, GOVERNMENT HOUSE, CHAPEL, HALL OF RECORDS, AND THE FIRING OF MANY OTHER BUILDINGS IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK: WITH AN ACCOUNT OF THE ARREST, INDICT- MENT, TRIAL AND EXECUTION OF THIRTY- THREE OF THE CONSPIRATORS, THIRTEEN OF WHOM WERE BURNED AT THE STAKE. ORIGINALLY PREPARED AND PUBLISHED BY DANIEL HORSMANDEN, ESQ., One of the Presiding Justices of the Supreme Court during said Trials. EDITED BY WILLIAM B. WEDGWOOD, ESQ., Counsellor at Law. NEW YORK: GEORGE W. SCHOTT, .177 WASHINGTON STREET. 1851.Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by GEORGE W. SCHOTT, in the Clerk’s office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.PREFACE. There was an insurrection of the negroes in this city, in 1712. On the 7th April, about two o’clock in the morn- ing, the house of Peter Van Tilburgh was set on fire by the negroes, who being armed with guns, knives and other weapons, killed and wounded several white people as they were coming to assist in extinguishing the flames. Notice thereof being soon carried to the fort, His Excellency Gover- nor Hunter ordered a cannon to be fired from the ramparts, to alarm the town, and detached a party of soldiers to the fire. At the appearance of the soldiers, the negroes immediately fled, and made their way out of the town to hide themselves in the woods and swamps. In their flight they also killed and wounded several white people, but being closely pursued, some conoealed themselves in barns and others in swamps, which being surrounded and strictly guarded till the morning, many of them were then taken. Some finding no way for their es- cape, shot themselves. After these wretches had murdered eight or ten white people, and a part had become their own ex- ecutioners, nineteen were apprehended and brought to trial for a conspiracy to murder the whites, and were convicted and executed. Several more who turned witnesses were transported. The memdry of the conspiracy of 1712, was fresh in the minds of the inhabitants of this city, at the time of the con- spiracy of 1741. The population of the city at that time was only about 12,000. Insurrections and conspiracies were fre- quent in the West India Islands, and great apprehensions were entertained of an invasion by the French and Spaniards. Un- der these circumstances it is not at all surprising that great alarm should universally prevail among the whites, when they saw the Fort on fire, together with the Chapel, Government House and Hall of Records. When these buildings had been entirely destroyed, and this was followed by many other firesiv PREFACE. occurring almost daily, we are not surprised that the law should be administered with an apparent degree of severity. The following history of the conspiracy and the journal of the trial of the conspirators was written by Mr. Justice Horsmanden, one of the Justices of the Supreme Court, who was present with the other Justices of the Court almost every day during the trial. The Editor has thought proper to give that account in the language of the writer, with some slight verbal alterations. It may not be improper here to take a glance at the early establishment and subsequent progress of slavery in the ter- ritories now within the boundaries of the United States. The first permanent English colony established on the con- tinent of America was the Virginia colony established at Jamestown, in 1607. The first three attempts to form colo- nies in that part of the country failed. Ninety of the first one hundred colonists landed at Jamestown died within the first six months. At a subsequent period, when but five hundred emigrants in the colony, four hundred andforty died in a period of six months. And when nine thousand colonists had taken up their residence in that place hut eighteen hundred survived. In the year 1620, a Dutch man-of-war entered the colony and landed twenty negro slaves for sale. These were pur- chased by the planters as an experiment. The experiment proved very successful. It was found that the negro was particularly constituted to endure fatigue in that climate and that he was not subject to those diseases which in that uncul- tivated state of the country swept off so large a proportion of the whites. This was the beginning of negro slavery in the English colonies. Slavery from importation increased with great rapidity in the English colonies to the time of the negro plot in 1741, and even on to the time of the revolution in 1776. At the period of the American revolution, negro slavery had existed in the colonies for more than one hundred* and fifty years. It was considered an evil and a growing evil, and vigorous efforts had been put forth to check its progress. Pe- tition after petition had been sent to the home government praying for the prohibition of the further importation of slaves into the colonies and for the entire abolition of the slave trade. The answer to the prayer of the petitioners was—“ We cannot abolish a trade so profitable as the slave trade.” The co- lonists then determined to take the matter into their own hands. The first colonial congress, which assembled in 1774, pro-PREFACE. V mulgated to the world as the solemn act of united America, signed by the delegates of all the colonies, the following decla- ration :—“ We will neither import nor purchase any slave im- ported after the first day of December next, after which time we will wholly discontinue the slave trade, and neither be con- cerned in it ourselves nor will we hire our vessels nor sell our commodities or manufactures to those who may be concerned in About four years after the close of the revolution in 1787, Congress declared that neither slavery nor involuntary ser- vitude should ever be allowed within that vast territory north- west of the Ohio river. This ordinance received the una- nimous vote of all the States with the exception of the vote of one member from New York. New Hampshire, Massa- chusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont and Pennsyl- vania had already abolished or taken measures to abolish slavery within their limits, and the votes of Delaware, Mary- land, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia were unanimously given for the positive exclusion of slavery from all that vast region now possessed by Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin. This act alone was sufficient to impress upon the national character the Stamp of Univer- sal Freedom. It must be remembered that the United States government has hardly past its childhood when compared with the age of other governments. Yet in that short period slavery has been abolished in a majority of the original States. That portion of the country where slavery is prohibited is larger than Eng- land, Ireland, France, Belgium, Holland, Prussia, Greece, Switzerland, and Portugal, not including our territory acquir- ed from Mexico. And the present slaveholding States have emancipated more slaves than England has purchased from all her colonies. All this has been effected freely and voluntarily on the part of the slaveholder and in no case have they re- ceived any compensation for their slaves. All will acknow- ledge that we have accomplished much in the cause of univer- sal freedom, and we shall not rest from our labors until our flag shall proclaim to the world “ that all over whom it WAVES ARE FREE.” During the revolutionary war, many of the negroes in the colonies repaired to the British, standard. At its close, in 1783, when that seven years bloody contest for American Inde- pendence was ended, these negroes were conveyed to different places by Great Britain. Many were taken to London,vi PREFACE. others were left on the cold and sterile island of Nova Scotia; others also were conveyed to the Bahama Islands. Those that were taken to London, soon found themselves Unemployed, poor, despised, forlorn, and classed with the nu- merous beggars who disgrace that city. It was found neces- sary to remove them and no longer suffer them to infest the streets of London. After about five years residence in that city, the government defrayed the expenses of their removal to the coast of Africa. Out of 460 who embarked, 84 died on the voyage, from the over-crowded condition of the vessels, and forty out of every hundred died within on,e year from the time they left London. These emigrants founded the colony of Sierra Leme, which colony was broken up by the natives in 1790, but again collected in 1791. In 1792 the negroes left by the British government at Nova Scotia, asked permis- sion to be transported to the same colony. Their request, and a free passage, was granted by the government. Soon after sixteen vessels sailed from Nova Scotia with about 1,200 blacks. Although some success has attended this colony, yet it can never flourish to any great extent so long as it is gov- erned by the British bayonet. But the condition of these co- lonists is far superior to that of the natives on that coast. Africa, in her native state, is indeed “ full of the habitations of cruelty.” Near the British colony of Sierra Leone, and west of the American colony of Liberia, are the native tribes of Ashantee and Dahomey, in both of which human sacrifices are constantly occurring. According to their ideas, the fu- ture world will be a counterpart of this ; will present the same objects to the senses, the same enjoyments, and the same dis- tinction of ranks in society. Upon this belief are founded proceedings not only absurd, but of the most violent and atro- cious description. A profusion of wealth is buried in the grave of the deceased, who is supposed to carry it into the other world : and human victims are sacrificed, often in whole Hecatombs, under the delusion that they will attend as his guards and ministers in the future mansion. This savage superstition seems to have prevailed to a peculiar extent in those great interior monarchies, which, in other respects, are more civilized than the rest of Western Africa. Says Mr. Bowditch, a British agent:—The Ashantees have two annual customs, as they are called, in which the king, and chief men, seek to propitiate the departed spirits of their an- cestors by the sacrifice of a crowd of human victims. Fo- reign slaves and criminals are selected in preference, but as each seeks to multiply the number, unprotected persons cannotPREFACE. VU walk abroad without the hazard of being seized and immolated. At the death of any of the royal family, victims must bleed in thousands ; and the same is the case when the king seeks, from the powers above, favorable omens respecting any great projected undertaking. On the death of the king, a most horrid scene of human slaughter takes place ; all the sacrifices that had been made for the death of every subject during his reign require to be repeated, to amplify that for the death of the monarch, and to solemnize it in every excess of extra- vagance and barbarity. The brothers, sons, and nephews of the king, affecting temporary insanity, burst forth with their muskets, and fire promiscuously among the crowd. Few per- sons of rank dare stir from their houses for the first two or three days, but drive forth their slaves as a compensation for their own absence. The king’s household slaves are all mur- dered on his tomb, to the number of a hundred or more, and women in abundance. As the king is allowed three thousand three hundred and thirty-three wives, and as the immolation of the wife on the death of the husband is customary in Africa, it is probable that many of the slaughtered women are the wives of the king, dispatched to attend their deceased lord in another world. The king of Ashantee, on the death of his mother, says Mr, Bowditch, devoted three thousand victims to water her grave, two thousand of whom were Fantee pri- soners, and the rest levied in certain proportions on the several towns. That this is no fabled account of the cruel superstitions of Ashantee, is evident from very recent testimony. As late as 1844, intelligence from Liberia, published in the African Re- pository, states that at the death of the late king one thousand human victims were sacrificed. The kingdom of Dahomey is governed upon the same sys- tem as Ashantee, and with all its deformities—which it carries to a still more violent excess. The bloody customs take place on a still greater scale ; and the bodies of the victims, instead of being buried, are hung upon the walls, and allowed to putrefy. Human skulls make the favorite ornament of the palaces and temples, and the king has his sleeping apartment paved with them. This statement is confirmed by the testimony of the Rev. J. L. Wilson, Missionary in Western Africa, in 1839, who writes, that “ human sacrifices are still offered in great num- bers, not only in Ashantee, but in all the petty principalities of the surrounding country. The story that the king of Da- homey has his yard paved with human skulls is no fableviii PREFACE. There are Europeans on the coast who have seen it, and can bear witness to the truth of the statement. Governor Abson, of Cape Coast Castle, visited the king of Dahomey at a time when six slave ships were at Wydah anxious to make purchases, and when, owing to the scarcity of slaves, the prices had risen to nearly thirty pounds. But such was the strength of superstition over avarice, that the king refused to sell his prisoners to the slave traders, preferring to put them to death for their skulls, in the contemplation of which the people seemed to take a horrible delight. When the governor inquired of the king, if his going to war was not to obtain captives to sell to the slave traders, he replied, “ I have killed many thousands without thinking of the slave market, and shall kill many thousands more. Some heads I place at my door, others I throw into the market-place, that people may stumble over them. This gives a grandeur to my customs ; this makes my enemies fear me ; and this pleases my ancestors, to whom I send them. Dahomeans do not make war to make slaves, but to make prisoners to kill at the customs.” The king of Dahomey used to hold a constant communica- tion with his deceased father. Whenever he wished to an- nounce to him any remarkable event, or to consult him on any emergency, he would send for one of his ablest messengers, and after delivering to him his errand, chop off his head. It some- times happened, that after the head was off, he recollected something else which he wished to say, in which case a second messenger was dispatched, in like manner, with a postscript to his former message. Gov. Abson was present on an occasion of this kind. The poor fellow selected for the honor of bear- ing his majesty’s message, aware of what was to happen, de- clared he was unacquainted with the road, on which the tyrant, drawing his sword, vociferated, “ I’ll show you the way,” and with one blow severed his head from his body, highly in- dignant that an European should have witnessed the least ex- pression of reluctance in the performance of a duty which-is considered a great honor. A famous Goulah chief, in 1848, anxious for success in a military campaign upon which he was setting out against the Condoes, applied to a Mohammedan priest to know what he should do to insure success. The priest inquired of him whe- ther he was able to make the necessary sacrifice, to which he replied that he could make any sacrifice that could be named. The nefarious impostor then told him he must sacrifice his son ! and, taking his dead body upon his shoulders, his feet swungPREFACE. ix around his neck, and his head hung behind him, in this manner advance before his troops to the contest, and victory would be certain ! ! The directions were complied with. Calling his eon into a house, he caught him, deliberately tied him, and then, with his own parental hand, he cut his throat! Having offered this sacrifice, he and his troops prepared to advance toward the jurisdiction of their enemies ; then was this inhu- man father seen with his dead son on his back, in th» manner directed, without any display of parental affection or emotion, save that aroused in his barbarous breast by the confident ex- pectation of victory. Being successful in three successive engagements, this horrible sacrifice will, no doubt, be hereafter considered as the sure precursor of victory. Such was African superstition in 1848, and such will it con- tinue to be until Christianity dispels the gloom which overcasts the native mind. Slavery of the most revolting form, together with polygamy and idolatry, exists among nearly all the native tribes. Dr. Goheen, the very intelligent and successful physician to the African Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States, after more than a year’s residence in Afri- ca, thus writes : “ Slavery in the United States, in its worst form, and un- der the lash, is not as bad as slavery here in its mildest form. It is a well known truth, that, in Western Africa, nine-tenths of the whole population are in a state of slavery. The fe- males are sold at an early age, to be, when they grow up, wives, or beasts of burden, as their proprietors may require. If the majority here were not slaves, how would they ever get into the foreign slave dealers’ hands ? They are sent in hundreds from the interior to the slave-factories, and sold. They are not deprived of their liberty when they leave these shores—they only change masters. Slaves they are, and as such they have been to the most savage rulers, who inflict up- on them the severest punishments, and feel fnee to kill, to eat, or to throw them alive upon the funeral pile, at' pleasure. Slavery in the United States, though an evil, cannot possibly be as great a one as it is here. Here is the country where slavery, with all its legitimate and concomitant horrors exists.” The number of wives possessed by the king of Dahomey equaled those of the king of Ashantee. The stoutest of them, says Mr. Bowditch, were enrolled into a military regi- ment, regularly trained to the use of arms, under a female general and subordinate officers ; and, according to the testi- mony of several Europeans, went through the exercise withX PREFACE. great precision; Governor Abson was present at Abomej when the king marched against the Eyoes, on which occasion he was attended by a body-guard of eight hundred women. English papers, for May, 1849, brought us some details of recent negotiations by an English agent, with the king of Da- homey, from which we learn that the number of his armed women is near six thousand at present. They constitute his body-gu^rd, and never leave him, and are answerable for the safety of his person. Notwithstanding the degraded condition of the native Afri- can at the present time, Africa was once the seat of civiliza- tion. With the Africans, civilization, in its higher forms, origi- nated ; to them may be traced the great events which led to the social well-being of the civilized world—to the estab- lishment of legislative, judicial, and fiscal departments of government, and of the whole frame-work of political me- chanism, necessary to give motion, steadiness, and permanence to the social machine. While Carthage and Thebes are re- membered ; while the monuments of Afric’s ancient grandeur tower to heaven amidst her desert sands ; while her forgotten arts stand chiseled in the eternal rocks; while her mum- mies are pirated from her tombs to be displayed in the muse- ums of Europe and America ; while the renown of her Pha- raohs is proclaimed in Holy Writ; while the names of Hannibal, Hanno, Jugurtha, Terence, Origen, Tertullian, Augustine, and Cyprian, are prominent in history; while Ethiopia looks out from behind the clouds of antiquity, beam- ing with the splendors of civilization; the world must have some reverence for that people. To restore Africa to her ancient state of civilization, puri- fied and refined by the true spirit of Christianity, giving to her also the inestimable boon of a free government is the privi- lege and duty of the American people. Within the last thirty years much has been done in the ac- complishment of this object. An Independent Republic has sprung into existence on her Western coast through the aid of American philanthropy. In this Republic every citizen is a person of color, a descendant of the ancient African. In the Declaration of Independence, published with the Con- stitution of the Republic, the following language is adopted :— “ We the representatives of the people of the Common- wealth of Liberia, in Convention assembled, invested with authority for forming a new government, relying upon the aid and protection of the Great Arbiter of human events, do here- by, in the name, and on the behalf of the people of this Com-PREFACE. Xi monwealth, publish and declare the said Commonwealth a FREE, SOVEREIGN, AND INDEPENDENT STATE, by the name and title of the Republic of Liberia. “ While announcing to the nations of the world the new posi- tion which the people of this Republic have felt themselves called upon^to assume, courtesy to their opinion seems to de- mand a brief accompanying statement of the causes which in- duced them, first to expatriate themselves from the land of their nativity and to form settlements on this barbarous coast, and now to organize their government by the assumption of a sovereign and independent character. Therefore we respect- fully ask their attention to the following facts. “ We, the people of the Republic of Liberia, were originally inhabitants of the United States of North America. “ From tiipe to time our number has been increased by mi- gration from America, and by accessions from native tribes ; and from time to time, as circumstances required it,- we have extended our borders by acquisition of land by honorable pur- chase from the natives of the country. “ As our territory has extended, and our population increased, our commerce has also increased. The flags of most of the civilized nations of the earth float in our harbors, and their merchants are opening with us an honorable and profitable trade. “ The people of the Republic of Liberia are of right, and in fact, a free, sovereign and independent State ; possessed of all the rights, powers, and functions of government. “ In assuming the momentous responsibilities of the position they have taken, the people of this Republic, feel justified by the necessities of the case, and with this conviction they throw themselves with confidence upon the candid consideration of the civilized world. “ In coming to the shores of Africa,we indulged the pleasing hope that we would be permitted to exercise and improve those faculties, which impart to man his dignity—to nourish in our hearts the flame of honorable ambition, to cherish and indulge those aspirations, which a beneficent Creator had im- planted in every human heart, and to evince to all who de- spise, ridicule and oppress our race, that we possess with them a common nature, are with them susceptible of equal refine- ment, and capable of equal advancement in all that adorns and dignifies man. u Among the strongest motives to leave our native land—to abandon forever the scenes of our childhood, and to sever the most endeared connections, was the desire for are treat, where,xii PREFACE. free from the agitations of fear and molestation, we could, in composure and seourity approach in worship the God of our fathers. “ Thus far our highest hopes have been realized. “ Liberia is already the happy home of thousands, who were once the doomed victims of oppression, and she will throw open a wider and yet a wider door for thousands who are now looking with an anxious eye for some land of rest. “ Our courts of justice are open equally to the stranger and the citizen for the redress of grievances, for the remedy of in- juries, and for the punishment of crime. “ Our numerous and well attended schools attest our efforts, and our desire for the improvement of our children. “ Our churches for the worship of our Creator, everywhere to he seen, bear testimony to our piety, and to pur acknow- ledgment of His Providence. “ The native African bowing down with us before the altar of the living God, declares that from us, feeble as we are, the light of Christianity has gone forth, while upon i that curse of curses, the slave trade, a deadly blight has fallen as far as our influence extends. “ Therefore in the name of humanity and virtue and religion —in the name of the Great God, our common Creator, and our common Judge, we appeal to the nations of Christendom, and earnestly and respectfully ask of them, that they will re- gard us with the sympathy and friendly consideration, to which the peculiarities of our condition entitle us, and to ex- tend to us that comity which marks the friendly intercourse of civilized and independent communities.” The following Mag and Seal were adopted by the conven- tion, as the insignia of the Republic of Liberia, and ordered to be employed to mark its nationality. Flag: six red stripes with five white stripes alternately dis- played longitudinally. In tbe upper angle of the flag, next to the spear, a square blue ground covering in depth five stripes. In the center of the blue, one white star. Seal: A dove on the wing with an open scroll in its cla#s. A view of the ocean with a ship under sail. The sun just emerging from the waters. A palm tree, and at its base a plow and spade. Beneath the emblems, the words “Republic of Liberia,” and above the emblems, the national motto, “The love of liberty brought us here.” W. B. W.HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY IN NEW YORK, IN 1741. As A robbery committed at Mr. Hogg’s paved the way to the discovery of tbe conspiracy, it may not be improper to in- troduce the ensuing journal and narrative with an account of that felony, as well as the many fires which alarmed the city, close upon each other, within less than three weeks, till they both came under the inquiry and examination of the grand jury, at the Supreme Court. Indeed, there is such a close connection between this felony and the conspiracy, that the narrative of the robbery could not well be omitted, for the inquiry concerning that was the means of drawing out the first hint concerning the other; nay, this felony and others were ac- tually ingredients of the conspiracy, as will appear by the sequel. On Saturday night, the 28th February, 1741, a robbery was committed at the house of Mr. Robert Hogg, in the city of New York, merchant, from whence were taken pieces of linen and other goods, and several silver coins, chiefly Spanish, and medals, and wrought silver, &c., to the value, in the whole, of sixty pounds and upwards. The occasion of this robbery, as will appear more fully hereafter, was one Wilson, a lad of about seventeen or eighteen years of age, belonging to the Flamborough man-of-war, on this station; having acquaintance with two white servants be- longing to gentlemen who lodged at Mr. Hogg’s house, Wilson used frequently to come thither on that pretence, which gained him easy admittance; but Wilson had a more familiar ac- quaintance with some negroes of very suspicious characters, particularly Caesar, belonging to Mr. John Varack,' baker; Prince, to Mr. John Auboyneau, merchant; and Cuffee, to Adolph Philipse, Esq. The Thursday before tbe robbery was committed, Wilson came to Mr. Hogg’s shop with one of the sailors belonging to14 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY the man-of-war, to buy some linen. Part of the money offered in payment was of Spanish coin, and Mrs. Hogg opening her bureau to change the money, pulled out a drawer in the view of Wilson, wherein were a considerable quantity of milled Spanish dollars. She soon reflected that she had done wrong in exposing her money to an idle boy in that manner, who came so frequently to her house, and immediately shut up the bureau again, and made a pretence of sending the money out to a neighbor’s to be weighed. This boy told his comrades of the black guard, the before- named Caesar, Prince and Cuffee, that they might have a fine booty at Hogg’s house in Broad street. The negroes catched at the proposal, and the scheme was communicated by them to John Hughson, who kept a public house by the North River, in this city, a place where numbers of negroes used to resort and be entertained privately, in defi- ance of the laws, at all hours, as appeared afterwards. Thither they used to bring such goods as they stole from their masters or others, and Hughson, his wife and family received them; there they held a consultation with Hughson and his family how they should act, in order to get hold of this booty. The boy Wilson told them the situation of the house and shop ; that the front was towards Broad street, and there was a side door out of the shop, into an alley commonly called the Jews alley, and if they could make an errand thither to buy rum, they might get an opportunity to shove back the bolt of the door facing the alley, for there was no lock to it, and then they could come in the night, afterwards, and gain their ends. At Hughson’s lodged'one Margaret Sorubiero, alias Saling- burgh, alias Kerry, commonly called Peggy, or the Newfound- land Irish beauty, a young woman about one or two and twenty. She pretended to be married, but no husband ap- peared. She was a person of infamous character, a notorious associate with the lowest grade of whites, and also negroes. She was here lodged and supported by Caesar, and took share of the spoils and plunder, the effects of Caesar’s thefts, which he brought to Hughson’s. She had lodged there the summer before, and removed from thence to a house by the new bat- tery, near one John Romme’s, a shoemaker, and was well ac- quainted with him and his wife; thither also Caesar used fre- quently’ to resort, with many other negroes; thither he also conveyed stolen goods. With Peggy, Caesar used frequently to sleep at Hughson’s, with the knowledge and permission of the family; and Caesar bargained with and paid Hughson for her board; she cameIN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 15 there to lodge a second time in the fall, not long before Christmas, 1740, at charge of Caesar, as was supposed, and had there not many days before the robbery at Hogg’s, a babe largely partaking of a dark complexion. Wilson coming to Mrs. Hogg’s on Sunday morning, she complained to him that she had been robbed the night before, that she had lost all the goods out of the shop, a great deal of silver, Spanish coins, medals, and other silver things, little suspecting that he had been the occasion of it, notwith- standing what she apprehended upon pulling out the drawer of money before him. Knowing he belonged to the man-of-war, and that several of those sailors frequented idle houses in the Jews alley, it happened that her suspicions inclined towards them. She imagined he might be able to give her some intel- ligence about it, and therefore described to him some things that she had missed, viz., snuff-boxes, silver medals, one a remarkable eight-square piece, &c. Wilson said, he had been that morning at Hughson’s house, and there saw one John Gwin, who pulled out of his pocket a worsted cap, full of pieces of coined silver; and that Mr. Philipse’s Cuffee, who was there, seeing John Gwin have this money, asked him to give him some, and John Gwin counted him out half-a- crown in pennies, and asked him if he would have any more ; and then pulled out a handful of silver coin, amongst which, Wilson said, he saw the eight-square piece described by Mrs. Hogg. Sunday, March 1.—This morning search was made for John Gwin, at Hughson’s, supposing him to have been a soldier of that name, a fellow of suspicious character, as Mrs. Hogg conceived; and the officers making inquiry accordingly for a soldier, they were answered, there was no such soldier in that house ; but it happened that Caesar, the real person wanted, was at the same time before their faces in the chimney corner. The officers returned without suspecting him to be the person meant, but the mistake being discovered by the boy (Wilson), that the negro Caesar, before mentioned, went by that name, Caesar was apprehended in the afternoon, and being brought before Wilson, Wilson declared that Caesar was the person he meant by John Gwin. Caesar was committed to prison. Monday, March 2.—Varack’s Caesar was examined by the justices, and denied everything laid to his charge con- cerning Hogg’s robbery, but was remanded.16 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY Auboyneau’s Prince was this day also apprehended upon account of the same felony. Upon examination he denied knowing anything of it. He was also committed. Upon information that Caesar had shown a great deal of silver at Hughson’s, it was suspected that Hughson knew something of the matter, and therefore search was made several times at his house, yesterday and to-day, but none of the goods or silver were discovered. Hughson and his wife were sent for, and were present while the negroes were examined by the justices, and were also examined themselves, touching the things stolen, but no- thing was discovered, and they were dismissed. Tuesday, March 3.—Hughson’s house having been searched several times over by Mr. Mills, the under- sheriff, and several constables, in quest of Hogg’s goods, without effect, it happened this evening, that Mary Burton, an indented servant to John Hughson, who came to him about midsummer, 1740, came to the house of James Kannady, one of the searching constables, to get a pound of candles for her master. Kannady’s wife knew the girl by sight, and to whom she belonged. Living in the neighborhood near them, and having heard of the robbery, and the several searches at Hughson’s, she took upon herself to examine Mary, “ whether she knev anything of those goods, and admonished her to discover if she did, lest she herself should be brought into trouble, and gave her motherly good advice, and said if she knew anything of it, and would tell, she would get her freed from her master.” Whereupon at parting, the girl said, “ she could not tell her then, she would tell her to-morrow; but that Mrs. K.’s husband was not cute enough, for that he had trod upon them,” and so went away. This alarmed Kannady and his wife, and the same evening Ann Kannady went to Mr. Mills, the under-sheriff, and told him what had passed between her and Mary Burton. “ Where- upon Mills and his wife, Mr. Hogg and his wife, and seV'eral constables, went with Ann Kannady and her husband, down to Hughson’s house; and Ann Kannady desired the under- sheriff to go in first, and bring Mary Burton out to her; but he staying a long time, Ann Kannady went into Hughson’s house, and found the under-sheriff and his wife, and Mary Burton, in the parlor, and she then denied what she had before said to Ann Kannady : then Ann Kannady charged her with it; till at length, Mary Burton said she could not tell them anything there, she wa-. afraid of her life, that theyIN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 17 would kill her. They then took the girl out of the house, and when they had got a littlp way from thence, she put her hand in her pocket, and pulled out a piece of silver money, which she said was part of Hogg’s money, which the negro had given her. They all went to Alderman Bancker’s with her, and Ann Kannady informing the alderman, that she had promised Mary Burton to get her freed from her master, he directed that she should lodge that night with the under- sheriff at the City Hall for safety; and she ivas left there accordingly.” For Mary Burton declared also, before the alderman, her apprehensions and fears, that she should be murdered or poisoned by the Hughsons and the negroes, for what she should discover. The alderman sent for John Hughson, and examined him closely, whether he knew anything of the matter; but he denied that he did at first, until the alderman pressed him very closely and admonished him (if it was in his power) to discover those who had committed this piece of villainy; little suspecting him to have been previously concerned, he was at last prevailed with to acknowledge he knew where some of the things were hid, and he went home, brought and de- livered them. Wednesday, March 4.—This day the mayor having sum- moned the justices to meet at the City Hall, several aldermen met him accordingly, and sent for Mary Burton and John Hughson and his wife ; and Mary Burton, after examination, made the following deposition before them. “Mary Burton, of the city of New York, spinster, aged about sixteen years, being sworn, deposed, 1. “ That about two o’clock On Sunday morning last, a negro man who goes by the name of John Gwin (or Quin) came to the house of John Hughson, the deponent’s master, and went in at the window where one Peggy lodges, where he lay all night. 2. “That in the morning she saw some specked linen, in the said Peggy’s room; that the said negro then gave the deponent two pieces of silver, and bid Peggy cut off an apron of the linen and give to the deponent, which she did ac- cordingly. 3. “ That at the same time the said negro bought a pair of white stockings from her master, for which he was to give six shillings; that the said negro had two mugs of punch, for which, and the s Lockings, he gave her master a lump of silver. 218 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY 4. “ That her master and mistress saw the linen the same morning. 5. “ That soon after Mr. Mills came to inquire for one John Quin, a soldier, who he said, had robbed Mr. Hogg of some specked linen, silver, and other things. 6. “ That after Mr. Mills was gone, her mistress hid the linen in the garret; and soon after some officers came and searched the house ; and when they were gone and found nothing, her mistress took the linen from the place she had be- fore hid it in, and hid it under the stairs. 7. “ That the night before last, her master and mistress gave the said linen to her mistress’s mother, who carried it away. 8. “ That yesterday morning, one John Romme was at her master’s house, and she heard him say to her master, If you will be true to me, I will be true to you; and her master an- swered, I will, and I will never betray you. 9. “ That the said negro usually slept with the said Peggy, which her master and mistress knew.” Upon this occasion, it seems, Hughson and his wife, finding that Mary Burton was inclined to discover this robbery, thought proper to say something to hlacken her character, in order to destroy her testimony, and declared, that she was a vile, good-for-nothing girl, or words to that purpose; that she had cohabited with her former master, the truth whereof, however, was never made out. But at length Hughson changed his language, and said she was a very good girl, and had been a trusty servant to them: that in the hard weather the last winter, she used to dress herself in man’s clothes, put on boots, and go with him in his sleigh, in the deep snows into the commons, to help him fetch firewood for his family. The deputy town clerk, when Mary Burton was under ex- amination, as he was taking her deposition, exhorted her to speak the truth, and all she knew of the matter. She answered him, that she hardly dared to speak, she was so much afraid she should be murdered by them, or words to that purpose. Whereupon the clerk moved the justices, that she might be taken care of, not knowing that she had been removed from'her master’s the night before, by order of a magistrate. After Mary Burton, John Hughson and his wife, and Peggy, were examined. Peggy denied everything, and spoke in favor of Hughson and his wife. Peggy was committed, and John Hughson confessed as followeth. Examination.—1. John Hughson said, “ That on Monday evening last, after Mr. Mills had been to search his house for goods which hr. v been stolen from Mr. Hogg, one Peggy, whoIN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 19 lodged at his house, told him that John Quin had left some checked linen and other thiDgs with her; that she delivered to the examinant the said checked linen, which he delivered to the mother-in-law Elizabeth Luckstead, with directions to hide them: that soon after the said Peggy delivered him sundry silver things in a little hag; which he carried into the cellar, and put behind a barrel, and put a broad stone upon them, where they remained till last night about ten or eleven o’clock, when he delivered them to Alderman Johnson and Alderman Bancker. 2. “ That while the said silver things lay concealed in his cellar, the constables came and searched his house for the said stolen goods, but did not find them. 3. “That this morning the said Peggy gave him a little bundle with several silver pieces in it; which he soon after- wards brought into court, and delivered it to the justices then present.” Hughson absolutely refused to sign the examination, after it was read over to him ; and thereupon the deputy town clerk asked him if it was not true as he had penned it; he answered, yes, it was, but he thought there was no occasion for him to sign it. He was admitted to bail, and his wife Sarah likewise; and recognizances were entered into with two sureties each, for their appearance in the Supreme Court on the first day of the next term. Caesar and Prince were likewise again examined, but would confess nothing concerning the robbery; Caesar was remanded, and Prince admitted to bail upon his master’s entering into re- cognizance in ten pounds penalty, for his appearance at the next Supreme Court. But Caesar acknowledged, that what Mary Burton had de- posed concerning him and Peggy, as to his sleeping with her, was true. Deposition.—John Yarack, of the city of New York, baker, being duly sworn and examined, saith, 1. “ That about two o’clock this afternoon, his negro hoy told him, there were some things hid under the floor of his kitchen; that thereupon he went to look, and found the linen and plates, now shown him, which he took out, and carried to the mayor. 2. “ That his said kitchen adjoins to the yard of John Rom- me, is a framed building, and the said linen and plates could easily be put there from the said' Romme’s yard, but could not be put there from his house, without taking up a board of the floor.”20 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY These were supposed to be part of the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg, and carried to Rorame’s, by Caesar, alias John Gwin. Upon Yarack’s deposition, orders were given for the appre- hending John Romme, but he absconded. Wednesday, March 18.—About one o’clock this day a fire broke out of the roof of his Majesty’s house at Fort George, within this city, near the chapel; when the alarm of fire was first given, it was observed from the town that the middle of the roof was in a great smoke, but not a spark of fire appeared on the outside for a considerable time ; and when it first broke out it was on the east side, about twenty feet from the end next the chapel, and in a short time afterwards it made its way through the roof in several places, at a distance from the first and from each other. Upon the chapel bell’s ringing, great numbers of people, gentlemen and others, came to the assist- ance of the Lieutenant Governor and his family, and most of the household goods were removed out and saved. The fire engines were in a little time brought; but the wind blowing a violent gale at S. E., as soon as the fire appeared in different places of the roof, it was judged impossible to save the house and chapel, so that endeavors were used to save the secre- tary’s office over the fort gate, where the records of the colony were deposited, and also the barracks which stood on the side of the quadrangle opposite to the house. Such diligence was used in removing the records, books and papers, many of which for dispatch were thrown out of the windows next the town, that most of them were preserved; and though from the violence of the wind the papers were blown about the streets no very material writings were lost. But the fire had got hold of the roof of the office soon after they began to remove the records, and though the engines played some time upon it, and afterwards upon the barracks, they were of little service, the wind blowing very hard, and the flames of the house be- ing so near them, all seemed to be at their mercy. An ajarm being given that there was gun-powder in the fort, whether through fear that there was, or whether the hint was given by some of the conspirators themselves, to intimidate the people, and frighten them from giving further assistance, we cannot say ; though the Lieutenant Governor declared to everybody that there was none there, yet they had not the courage to de- pend upon his Honor’s assurance. However, it happened most of them deserted it, until they found that many gentle- men remained upon the spot; though, had they all stayed, itIN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 21 would have been to little purpose; for such was the violence of the wind, and the flames spread so fast, that in about an hour and a quarter’s time the house was burnt down to the ground, and the chapel and other buildings beyond human power of saving any material part of them. At length, the fire got to the stables without the fort, and the wind blew fired shingles upon the houses in the town next the JiTorth River, so that there was the utmost danger of its spreading further, which occasioned many families to remove their goods; but at last it was stopped at the Governor’s stables, with very little damage to the houses in the town. While the records were being removed from the secretary’s office, there fell a moderate shower of rain, which was of some service. When the buildings were down to the ground floor, some hand-grenade shells, which had lain so long as to be for- gotten, took fire and went off, which few or none but the officers of the fort could account for, nor would it have been worth while to have attempted their removal, if they had been thought of, for the buildings in the fort were at that time all given over for lost. This served to confirm the people that there was powder in the fort, and if they could have done any good, this would probably have prevented them. But though the floors of the several buildings soon tumbled in, there were many pieces of timber which were laid in the walls of the house, chapel steeple, and other buildings, which continued burning almost all the night after. It was appre- hended, as the fort stood upon an eminence, that the wind might have blown some of the fire upon the houses in the town, which for the most part have shingled roofs ; therefore, care was taken to keep a watchful guard all the night, to pre- vent further damage. Mr. Cornelius Van Horne, a captain of one of the companies of the militia, very providentially beat to arms in the evening, and drew out his men with all expedition. He hack seventy odd of them under arms all night, and parties of them contin- ually going the rounds of the city until daylight. This inci- dent, from what will appear hereafter, may be thought to have been a very fortunate one, though at that time some 'people reproached that gentleman for it. The only way of accounting for this misfortune at this time was that the Lieutenant Governor had ordered a plumber that morning to mend a leak in the gutter between the house and the chapel, which joined one another, and the man carrying his fire-pot with coals to keep his soldering iron hot, to per- form his work, and the wind setting into the gutter, it was22 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY thought some sparks had been blown out upon the shingles of the house. Some people having observed, that upon the first alarm, near half the roof was covered with smoke, and that no spark of fire appeared without, nor could any be seen but within, concluded that the reason assigned was not likely to be the right one, especially when it was considered that at length the fire broke out in several places of the roof distant from each other; but no one imagined it was done on purpose. Friday, March 20.—Mr. Auboyneau’s Prince, who was bailed out of prison, as before mentioned, was re-committed by the mayor, and Alderman Bancker. Wednesday, March 25.—A week after the fire at the fort, another broke out between 11 and 12 o’clock, at the house be- longing to Captain Warren, near the long bridge, at the south- west end of the town; the roof was in flames, supposed at that time to have been occasioned by the accidental firing of a chimney; but when the matter came afterwards to be can- vassed, it was not altogether clear of grounds of suspicion, that it was done designedly; but the fire-engines were soon brought, and they played so successfully, though the fire had got to a considerable head on an old shingled roof, that by their aid, and the assistance and activity of the people, it was soon extinguished, without doing much damage to the house. Wednesday, April 1.—Another week from the last, a fire Droke out at the storehouse of Mr. Van Zant, towards the east end of the town. It was an old wooden building, stored with deal boards, and hay at one end of it. The fire was said to be occasioned by a man’s smoking a pipe there, which set fire to the hay; but it is said the fire was first discovered in the northeast side of the roof, before it had taken the hay. This house was near the river, and by the side of a slip out of it, convenient for handing water to the engines. It was thought morally impossible to hinder its spreading further, there being many wooden buildings adjoining; but the people handed out the boards into the slip, all in flames, played the engines, and handed and threw the buckets of water, with such extraordi- nary activity, and stopped the progress of the fire so successfully, that it ended with little more damage than the entire consump- tion of the warehouse and most of the goods in it. Saturday, April 4.—This evening there was an alarm of fire at the house of one Quick, or Vergereau (for they bothIN NEW YORE, IN 1741. 23 lived under one roof), in the Fly. Upon inquiry, the fire was found to be in a cow-stable near the houses; the hay was on fire in the middle of it; but by timely assistance it was sup- pressed. As the people were returning from Quick’s fire, that was succeeded by a second cry of fire, at the house of one Ben Thomas, next door to Captain Sarly, on the west side; this was in the dusk of the evening. It began in the loft of the kitchen, was discovered by the smoke before the fire had got any head, and was soon extinguished. Upon examination, it was found that the fire had been put between a straw and another bed, laid together, whereon a negro slept, but who did it, or how the fire happened at Quick’s, remained to be accounted for. Sunday, April 5.—A discovery was made in the morning early, that some coals had been put under a haystack, standing near the coach-house and stables of Joseph Murray, Esq., in Broadway, and near some dwelling-houses, which had it taken fire, would have been in great danger, but the coals went out of themselves, as supposed, having only singed some part of the hay. It was said there were coals and ashes traced along from the fence to a neighboring house next adjoining the sta- bles, which caused a suspicion of the negro that lived there. The five several fires, viz. at the fort,.Captain Warren’s house, Yan Zant’s store-house, Quick’s stable, and Ben Thomas’s kitchen, having happened in so short a time succeeding each other; and the attempt made of a sixth on Mr. Murray’s hay- stack; it was natural for people of any reflection, to conclude that the fire was set on purpose by a combination of villains, and therefore occasioned great uneasiness. But upon this sup- position nobody imagined there could be any further design, than for some wicked wretches to have the opportunity of mak- ing a prey of their neighbors’ goods, under pretence of assist- ance in removing them for security from the danger of flames ; for upon these late instances, many of the sufferers had com- plained of great losses of their goods and furniture, which had been removed from their houses upon these occasions. This Sunday as three negroes were walking up Broadway towards the English church, about service time, Mrs. Earle looking out of her window, overheard one of them saying to his companions, “ Fire, Fire, Scorch, Scorch, a little, damn it, by-and-by,” and then threw up his hands and laughed. The woman thought it very odd behavior at that time, consid- ering what had so lately happened; and she immediately24 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY spoke of it to her next neighbor Mrs. George, but said she did not know any of the negroes. About an hour after, when church was out, Mrs. Earle saw the same negroes coming down Broadway again, and pointed out to Mrs. George the person who had spoken the words, and Mrs. George knew him, and said that it is Mr. Walter’s Quaco. These words, and the airs and graces given them by Quaco when he uttered them, were made known to a neighboring al- derman, who informed the rest of the justices thereof at their meeting the next day. Monday, April 6.—About ten o’clock in the morning, there was an alarm of a fire at the house of Serjeant Burns, oppo- site Fort Garden. This, it was said, was only a chimney, which, upon inquiry, the man declared, had been swept the Friday before, but from the great smother in the house, and some other circumstances, there were grounds to suspect a villainous design in it. Towards noon a fire broke out in the roof of Mrs. Hilton’s house, at the corner of the buildings next the Fly Market, ad- joining on the east side of Captain Sarly’s house. It first broke out on that side next Sarly’s, but being timely discover- ed, was soon prevented doing much mischief, more than burn- ing part of the shingles of the roof. Upon view, it was plain that the fife must have been purposely laid on the wall-plate adjoining to the shingle roof; for a hole had been burnt deep in it, next that part of the roof where the fire had taken hold of the shingles; and it was suspected that the fire had been wrapped up in a bundle of tow, for some was found near the place. Thus the fact was plain, but who did it, was a ques- tion remaining to be determined. But there was a cry among the people, the Spanish negroes; the Spanish negroes; take up the Spanish negroes. The occasion of this was the two fires happening so closely together, on each side of Captain Sarly’s house ; and it being known that Sarly had purchased a Spanish negro, some time before brought into this port, among several others, in a prize taken by Captain Lush; all which negroes were condemned as slaves, in the court of Ad- miralty, and sold at vendue; they afterwards pretending to have been free men in their own country, and began to grum- ble at their hard usage, in being sold as slaves. This probably gave rise to the suspicion, that this negro, out of revenge, had been the instrument of these two fires ; and he behaving him- self insolently upon some people’s asking him questions con- cerning them, which signified their distrust, it was told to aIN NEW TORE, IN 1741. 25 magistrate who was near, and he ordered him to jail, and also gave direction to the constables to commit all the rest of that cargo, in order for their safe custody and examination. In the afternoon the magistrates met at the City Hall, with intent to examine them; and while the justices were proceed- ing to the examination, about four o’clock, there was another alarm of fire. Upon inquiry, it was found to be at Col. Philipse’s storehouse. Upon the first view of it, there was a small streak of fire running up the shingles, from near the bottom to the top of the roof, on the side directly against the wind as it then blew. Not being far from the engines, they were instantly brought to the place; and the fire soon extin- guished. This was the middle of three large storehouses next each other in a row, old timber buildings, and the shingles burnt like tinder. These storehouses were not inhabited, nor had they a chimney in them, but were at a great distance from any. The fire, upon examination, must have begun inside; for between the side of those storehouses and the houses near- est them, opposite to the wind, there was a large space of garden ground ; so that no spark from these chimneys could have occasioned this mischief, had the wind blown the con- trary way; but to discover by whom the fire was set, was the difficulty. t While the people were extinguishing the fire at this store- house, and had almost mastered it, there was another cry of fire, which diverted the people attending the storehouse, to the new alarm, very few remaining behind ; but a man who hs-.d been on the top of the house, assisting in extinguishing the fire, saw a negro leap out at the end window of one of them, from thence making over several garden fences in great haste ; which occasioned him to cry out, a negro ; a negro ; and that was soon changed to an alarm, that the negroes were rising. The negro made very good speed home to his master’s. He was generally known, and the swiftness of his flight occasioned his being remarked, though scarce any knew the reason, but a few which remained at the storehouse, why the word was given, a negro, a negro ; it was immediately changed into Cuff Philipse, Cuff Philipse. The people ran to Mr. Philipse’s house in quest of him; he was found, and was dragged out of the house, and carried to jail, borne upon the people’s shoulders. His master being a single man, pud little at homo, Cuff had a great deal of idle time, which, it seems, he em- ployed to very ill purposes, and had acquired a general bad name. Many people had such terrible apprehensions upon this26 HISTORY OP THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY occasion, that several negroes who were met in the streets, after the alarm of their rising, were hurried away to jail; and when they were there, they were continued some time in con- finement, before the magistrates could spare time to examine into their several cases. There was another fire this day, though it has by some been supposed to have been an accident. The cellar of a baker near Coenties market, was all of a smother, and the chips in a blaze, but was soon suppressed. This also occasioned some alarm. • Walter’s Quaco was sent for and committed. He remained in confinement some days without examination, from the hurry the magistrates were in. At length, Mrs. Earle and Mrs. George being sent for by the justices, declared concerning him to the effect before mentioned, and Quaco being brought be- fore them, and examined, admitted he had spoken the words charged; but it being soon after we had the news of Admiral Vernon’s taking Porto Bello, he had contrived a cunning ex- cuse, or some abler heads for him, to account for the occasion of them, and brought two of» his own complexion to give their words for it also, that they were talking of Admiral Vernon’s taking Porto Bello; and that he thereupon signified to his companions, that he thought that was but a small feat to what his brave officer would do by-and-by, to annoy the Spaniards, so Quaco was discharged from his confinement for some time. Others considering that it was but eighteen days after the fort was laid in ashes, that these words were uttered; and that several other fires had intervened, as before related, and but the next day after Quick’s stable and Ben Thomas’s house were on fire ; and the attempt upon Mr. Murray’s haystack dis- covered that very morning; they were apt to put a different construction upon Quaco’s words and behavior; they con- sidered that he meant thereby, “ that the fires which we had seen already, were nothing to what we should have by-and-by, for that then we should have all the city in flames, and he should rejoice at itfor it was said he lifted up his hands, and spread them with a circular sweep over his head, after he had pronounced the words [by-and-by] and then concluded with a loud laugh. Whether these figures are thus more pro- perly applied, the reader will hereafter be better able to judge; but the construction of them at that time confirmed many in the idea of a conspiracy. His Honor the Lieutenant Governor was pleased to order a military watch to be kept this evening, and the same was continued all the summer after.IN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 27 Wednesday, April 8.—John Hughson and Sarah his wife were committed to jail by the mayor and three aldermen, being charged as accessories to divers felonies and misdemeanors. Saturday, April 11.—The common council of the city of New York: present— John Cruger, Esq., Mayor, The Recorder, Gerardus Stuyvesant, William Romme, Simon Johnston, John Moore, Henry Bogert, Isaac Stoutenbergh, Philip Minthorne, Christopher Bancker, John Pintard, John Marshall, Esquires, Aldermen; George Brinkerlioff, Robert Benson, and Samuel Lawrence, Assistants. The recorder taking notice of the several fires which had lately happened in this city, and the manner of them, which had put the inhabitants into the utmost consternation, said that every one that reflected on the circumstances attending them, the frequency of them, and the causes being yet undis- covered, must necessarily conclude that they were occasion- ed and set on foot by some villainous confederacy of latent enemies amongst us, but with what intent and purpose time must discover; that it could not be doubted, but the lieu- ten am governor and his majesty’s council had taken the alarm at this time of danger, and were watchful, and anx- ious for the safety of the city ; and though they were of opin- ion that it was, highly proper and necessary that a proclama- tion should be issued by the government, promising proper rewards to such person or persons as should make such dis- covery of the incendiaries, their confederates and accomplices, as tha they should be convicted thereof; yet it was well known that the governor and council had not the liberty of drawing upon the colony treasury for any sum of money what- soever’, upon any emergency—and it could not be reasonably expected the governor should subject himself to pay such rewards out of his own pocket, for the use and necessities of the public ; that as the safety of the city so immediately con- cerned, seemed absolutely to require such a measure to be taken,'so the public, who were also interested in the preserva- tion of it, would reap the benefit in common with them, by the corporation’s laudable resolution, should they determine to en- gage to pay proper rewards, and request the governor to issue a28 HISTORY OP THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY proclamation agreeable thereto; which, he was persuaded, the governor was well inclined to do, and the gentlemen of the coun- cil to advise thereto—he therefore moved, “that the board should come to a resolution to pay such rewards as should by them be thought a proper and sufficient temptation to induce any party or parties concerned to make such discovery.” Upon consideration thereof it was ordered, “ That this board request his honor the lieutenant-governor to issue a proclama- tion, offering a reward to any white person that should dis- cover any person or persons lately concerned in setting fire to any dwelling-house or store-house in this city (so that such person or persons be convicted thereof), the sum of one hun- dred pounds, current money of this province; and that such person shall be pardoned if concerned therein. And any slave that should make discovery, to be manumitted, or made free, and the master of such slave to receive twenty-five pounds therefor; and the slave to receive, besides his free- dom, the sum of twenty pounds, and to be pardoned; and if a free negro, mulatto, or Indian, to receive forty-five pounds, and also to be pardoned if concerned therein. And that this board will issue their warrant to the chamberlain, or treasurer of this corporation for the payment of such sum as any person, by virtue of such proclamation, shall be entitled unto. And that the mayor and recorder wait on his honor the lieute&nt- governor, and acquaint him with the resolution of this bj^rd.” The mayor and recorder waited on his honor accoidingly, and a copy of the order was also delivered to him. Many persons in the neighborhood of the several fires before mentioned, thought it necessary to remove their household goods for safety, and in their consternation, suffered anybody who offered their assistance to take them away. There were great complaints of losses on those occasions, which the magis- trates took this day into their consideration, it being suspected that there were some strangers lurking about the city, who had been the instruments and occasion of these fires, tiiat by those means they might have opportunities of pilfering and plundering. A scheme was proposed that there should be a general search of all houses throughout the town, wher ffiy it was thought probable discoveries might be made, not only of stolen goods, but likewise of lodgers, that were strangers, and suspicious persons. The proposal was approved of, and each alderman and his common councilman, with constables atl& d- ing them, undertook to search his respective ward on the south side of the fresh water pond, and the Monday following was the day fixed upon for making the experiment.IN NEW YORK, IN 1741. 29 The scheme was communicated to the governor, and his honor thought fit to order the militia out that day in aid of the magistrates, who were to be dispersed through the city, and sentries of them posted at the ends of the streets to guard all avenues, with orders to stop all suspected persons that should be observed carrying bags or bundles, or removing goods from house to house, in order for their examination, and all this was to be kept very secret till the project was put in execution. Monday, April 13.—Pursuant to the scheme concerted on Saturday last, the general search was made, but there were not any goods discovered which were said to have been lost, nor was there any strange lodger or suspicious person detected. But some things were found in the custody of Robin, Mr. Chamber’s negro, and Cuba his wife, which the alderman thought improper for, and unbecoming the condition of slaves, which made him suspect they were not obtained honestly, and therefore ordered the constable to take them in possession, to be reserved for further inquiry, and these two negroes were pommitted. Friday, April 17.—The lieutenant-governor, by and with the advice of his majesty’s council, issued a proclamation, therein reciting the before-mentioned order and resolution of the common council, promising the rewards agreeable thereto. In the meanwhile, between the sixth and seventeenth instant, a great deal of time had been spent by the magistrates in the examination of the negroes in custody, upon account of these fires. Philipse’s Cuff was closely interrogated, but he absolutely denied knowing anything of the matter. He said he had been at home all that afternoon, from the time he returned from Hilton’s fire, where he had been to assist and carry buckets. That he was at home when the bell rung for the fire at Col. Philipse’s storehouse. It appeared, upon inquiry and exami- nation of witnesses, that he, according to his master’s orders, had been sawing wood that afternoon with a white boy, and that when his master came home from dinner, he took him off from that work, and set him to sew on a vane upon a board for his sloop. The white boy testified, “ that he stood by him to see him sew it, and that he left him but a little before the bell rung for the fire.” And when the alarm of the fire was given, and it was supposed to be at his master’s store- house, Cuff was asked whether he would go out with the buck- ets, and he answered, that he had enough of being out in tbe30 HISTORY OF THE NEGRO CONSPIRACY IN 1741 morning. Some of the neighbors also declared that they had seen him looking over his master’s door but a little time before the bell rung; but an old man who had known Cuff for seve- ral years, deposed, that he had seen him at the fire at the storehouse, and that he stood next to him. There seemed to be some objection against the man’s evidence; it was thought he might be mistaken, being very near-sighted. Upon exami- nation, it was found he could distinguish colors, and he de- scribed the clothes he had on, and moreover declared, he spoke to him, and asked him why he did not hand the buck- ets, and that he answered him, and did hand water, and that he knew his voice. There was very strong proof that he was the negro that leaped out of the window of one of the storehouses as the fire was extinguished, and most of the people drawn away upon the new alarm of fire ; that he was seen to leap over several garden fences, and to run home in great haste. Upon the whole, it was thought proper Cuff should remain in confinement, to await further discovery.PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE CONSPIRATORS! AT NEW YORK, IN 1741. At a Supreme Court of Judicature held in and for the province of New York, at the City Hall of the City of New York, on Tuesday, April 21, 1741—Present, Frederick Philipse, Esq., second justice; Daniel Horsmanden, Esq., third justice. The grand jury were called. The following persons ap- peared, and were sworn—viz.: Mr. Robert Watts, merchant, foreman ; Messrs. Jeremiah Latouche, Anthony Rutgers, John Cruger, jun., Adoniah Schuyler, Abraham Keteltass, Rene Hett, David Yan Horne, Thomas Duncan, Joseph Read, John M‘Evers, John Merritt, Isaac De Peyster, David Provoost, Henry Beekman, jun., George Spencer, Winant Van Zant, merchants. Mr. Justice Philipse gave the charge to the grand jury, as folio weth. “ Gentlemen of the Grand Jury :—It is not without some concern, that I am obliged at this time to be more particular in your charge, than for many preceding terms. The many frights and terrors which the good people of this city have of late been put into, by repeated and un- usual fires, and burning of houses, give us too much room to suspect, that some of them at least, did not proceed from mere chance, or common accidents; but on the contrary, from the premeditated malice and wicked purposes of evil and designing persons; and therefore, it greatly behooves us to use our utmost diligence, by all lawful ways and means, to discover the contrivers and perpetrators of such daring and flagitious undertaking; that, upon conviction, they may receive32 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE consign punishment; for although we have the happiness of living under a government which exceeds all others in the excellency of its constitution and laws, yet if those to whom the execution of them (which my Lord Coke calls the life and soul of the law) is committed, do not exert themselves in a conscientious discharge of their respective duties, such laws, which were intended for a terror to the evil-doer, and a protec- tion to the good, will become a dead letter, and our most ex- cellent constitution turned into anarchy and confusion—every one practicing what he listeth, and doing what shall seem good in his own eyes—to prevent which, it is the duty of all grand juries to inquire into the conduct and behavior of the people in their respective counties; and if, upon examination, they find any to have transgressed the laws of the land, to prevent them, that they may by the court be put upon their trial, and then either be discharged or punished according to their demerits. “ I am told there are several prisoners now in jail, who have been committed by the city magistrates, upon suspicion of having been concerned in some of the late fires ; and others, who under the pretence of assisting the unhappy sufferers, by saving their goods from the flames, for stealing, or receiving them. This, indeed, is adding affliction to the afflicted, and is a very great aggravation of such crime, and therefore deserves a narrow inquiry—that the exemplary punishment of the guilty (if any such should be so found) may deter others from com- mitting the like villainies—for this kind of stealing, I think, has not been often practiced among us. <£ Gentlemen,—Arson, or the malicious and voluntary burn- ing, not only a mansion-house, but also any other house, and the outbuildings, or barns, and stables adjoining thereto, by night or by day, is felony at common law, and if any part of the house be burned, the offender is guilty of felony, notwith- standing the fire afterwards be put out, or go out of itself. “ This crime is of so shocking a nature, that if we have any in this city, who, having been guilty thereof, should escape, who can say he is safe, or tell where it will end ? “ Gentlemen,—Another thing which I cannot omit recom- mending to your serious and diligent inquiry is, to find out and present all such persons who sell rum, and other strong liquor to negroes. It must be obvious to every one that there are too many of them in this city, who, under pretence of selling what they call a penny dram to a negro, will sell to him as many quarts or gallons of rum^ as he can steal money or goods to pay for.CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 33 “ How this notion of its being lawful to sell a penny dram, or a pennyworth of rum to a slave, without the consent or di- rection of his master, has prevailed, I know not; but this I am sure of, that there is not only no such law, but that the doing of it is directly contrary to an act of Assembly now in force, for the better regulating of slaves. The many fatal consequen- ces flowing from this prevailing and wicked practice, are so no- torious, and so nearly concern us all, that one would be almost surprised to think there should be a necessity for a court to recommend a suppressing of such pernicious houses. Thus much in particular; now in general. “ My charge, gentlemen, further is, to present all conspira- cies, combinations, and other offences, from treasons down to trespasses; and in your inquiries, the oath you and each of you have just now taken will, I am persuaded, be your guide, and I pray God to direct and assist you in the discharge of your duty.” Court adjourned till ten o’clock to-morrow morning. SUPREME COURT. Wednesday, April 22.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse. The Court opened, and adjourned until ten o’clock to-morrow morning. The grand jury having been informed that Mary Burton could give them some account concerning the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg’s, sent for her this morning, and ordered that she should be sworn; the constable returned and acquainted them that she said she would not be sworn nor give evidence ; whereupon they ordered the constable to get a warrant from a magistrate, to bring her before them. The constable was gone some time, but at length returned, and brought her with him; and being asked why she would not be sworn and give her evidence, she told the grand jury she would not be sworn, and seemed to be under some great uneasiness, or terrible ap- prehensions; which gave suspicion that she knew something concerning the fires that had lately happened ; and being asked a question to that purpose, she gave no answer; which increased the suspicion that she was privy to them; and as it was thought a matter of the utmost concern, the grand jury were very impor- tunate, and used many arguments with her, in public and pri- vate, to persuade her to speak the truth, and tell all she knew about it. To this end, the lieutenant-governor’s proclamation was read to her, promising indemnity, and the reward of one hundred pounds to any person, confederate or not, who should s'34 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE make discovery. She seemed to despise it, nor could the grand jury, by any threats or promises, prevail upon her, though they assured her withal that she should have the pro- tection of the magistrates, and her person be safe and secure from harm; but hitherto all was in vain: therefore, the grand jury desired Alderman Bancker to commit her, and the consta- ble was charged with her accordingly, but before he had got her to jail, she considered better of it, and resolved to be sworn and give her evidence in the afternoon. Accordingly, she being sworn, came before the grand jury; but as they were proceeding to her examination, and before they asked her any questions, she told them she would ac- quaint them with what she knew relating to the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg’s, but would say nothing about the fires. This expression, thus as it were providentially slipping from the witness, much alarmed the grand jury; for, as they natu- rally concluded, it did by construction amount to an affirma- tive that she could give an account of the occasion of the sev- eral fires; and therefore, as it highly became those gentlemen in the discharge of their trust, they determined to use their utmost diligence to sift out the discovery, but still she remained inflexible, till at length, having recourse to religious topics, representing to her the heinousness of the crime which she would be guilty of, if she was privy to, and could discover so wicked a design as the firing houses about our ears; whereby not only people’s estates would be destroyed, but many per- sons might lose their lives in the flames : this she would have to answer for at the day of judgment as much as any person immediately concerned, because she might have prevented this destruction and would not; so that a most damnable sin would lie at her door ; and what need she fear from her divulging it; she was sure of the protection of the magistrates; which argu- ments at last prevailed, and she gave the following evidence, which, however, notwithstanding what had been said, came from her, as if still under some terrible apprehensions or re- straints. Deposition, No. 1.—Mary Burton, being sworn, deposeth, 1. “ That Prince and Caesar brought the things of which they had robbed Mr. Hogg, to her master, John Hughson’s house, and they were handed in through the window, Hughson, his wife, and Peggy receiving them, about two or three o’clock on a Sunday morning. 2. “That Caesar,Prince, and Mr. Philipse’s negro man (Cuffee) used to meet frequently at her master’s house, and that she had heard them (the negroes) talk frequently of burning the fort;CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 35 and that they would go down to the Fly at the east end of the city, and burn the whole town ; and that her master and mis- tress said, they would aid and assist them as much as they could. 3. “That in their common conversation they used to say, that when all this was done, Caesar should be governor, and Hughson, her master, should be king. 4. “ That Cuffee used to say, that a great many people had too much, and others too little ; that his old master had a great deal of money, but that, in a short time, he should have less, and that he (Cuffee) should have more. 5. “ That at the same time when the things of which Mr. Hogg was robbed, were brought to her master’s house, they brought some indigo and beeswax, which was likewise received by her master and mistress. 6. “ That at the meetings of the three aforesaid negroes, Csesar, Prince and Cuffee, at her master’s house, they used to say, in their conversation, that when they set fire to the town, they would do it in the night, and as the white people came to extinguish it, they would kill and destroy them. 7. “ That she has known at times, seven or eight guns in her master’s house, and some swords, and that she has seen twenty or thirty negroes at one time in her master’s house ; and that at such large meetings, the three aforesaid negroes, Cuffee, Prince and Csesar were generally present, and most active, and that they used to say, that the other negroes durst not refuse to do what they commanded them, and they were sure that they had a number sufficient to stand by them. 8. “ That Hughson (her master) and her mistress used to threaten, that if she, the deponent, ever.made mention of the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg, they would, poison her; and the negroes swore, if ever she published or discovered the design of burning the town, they would burn her whenever they met her. 9. “ That she never saw any white person in company when they talked of burning the town, but her master, her mistress, ana Peggy.” This evidence of a conspiracy, not only to burn the city, but also to destroy and murder the people, was most astonishing to the grand jury, and that any white people should become so abandoned as to confederate with slaves in such an execrable and detestable purpose, could not but be very amazing to every one that heard it; but that the several fires had been occasioned by some combination of villains, was, at the time of them, natu-36 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE rally to be collected from the manner and circumstances attend- ing them. The grand jury, therefore, as it was a matter of the utmost consequence, thought it necessary to inform the judges con- cerning it, in order that the most effectual measures might be concerted, for discovering the confederates; and the judges were acquainted with it accordingly. SUPREME COURT. Thursday, April 23.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The grand jury came into court and were called over. The foreman desiring that Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, a prisoner might be brought before them, Ordered, that the sheriff do carry the said Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, be- fore the grand jury, and see her safe returned again. The court adjourned until ten o’clock to-morrow morning. This morning the judges summoned all the gentlemen of the law in town, to meet them in the afternoon, in order to consult with them, and determine upon such measures as on the result of their deliberations should be judged most proper to be taken upon this emergency; and Mr. Murray, Mr. Alexander, Mr. Smith, Mr. Chambers, Mr. Nicholls, Mr. Lodge, and Mr. Ja- mison, met them accordingly; the attorney general being indis- posed, could not attend. It was considered, that though there was an act of the pro- vince for trying negroes, as in other colonies, for all manner of offences by the justices, in a summary way; yet as this was a scheme of villainy in which white people were confeder- ated with them, and most probably were the first movers and seducers of the slaves; from the nature of such a conjunction, there was reason to apprehend there was a conspiracy of deeper design and more dangerous contrivance than the slaves them- selves were capable of; it was thought a matter that required great secrecy, as well as the utmost diligence, in the conduct of the inquiry concerning it: and upon the whole, it was judged most advisable, as there was an absolute necessity that a mat- ter of this nature and consequence should be fathomed as soon as possible, that it should be taken under the care of the su- preme court; and for that purpose, that application should be made to his honor the lieutenant-governor, for an ordinance to enlarge the term for the sitting of that court, which in the ordinary method would terminate on the Tuesday following. The genthmen of the law generously and unanimously offer-CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 37 ed to give their assistance on every trial in their turns, as this was conceived to be a matter that not only affected the city, but the whole province. Margaret Kerry, commonly called Peggy, committed for Hogg’s robbery, being impeached by Mary Burton, as one of the conspirators, the judges examined her in prison in the even- ing ; they exhorted her to make a full confession and discovery of what she knew of it, and gave her hopes of their recom- mendation to the governor for a pardon, if they could be of opinion that she deserved it, assuring her (as the case was) that they had his honor’s permission to give hopes of mercy to such criminals as should confess their guilt, and they should think proper to recommend to him as fit and proper objects ; but she withstood it, and positively denied that she knew any- thing of the matter; and said, that if she should accuse any body of any such thing, she must accuse innocent persons, and wrong her own soul. She had this day been examined by the grand jury, and positively denied knowing anything about the fires. SUPREME COURT. Friday, April 24.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. * The King against Caesar and Prince, negroes. The grand jury having found two bills of indictment for felonies, against the prisoners; Mr. Attorney General moved, that they be brought to the bar, in order to be arraigned. It was ordered, and they being brought, were arraigned ac- cordingly, and severally pleaded not guilty. The King against John Hughson, Sarah, his wife, Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry. The grand jury having found a bill of indictment for felony, against the defendants in custody, Mr. Attorney General moved, that they be brought to the bar in order to be ar- raigned. It was ordered, and the prisoners being brought, were ar- raigned accordingly, and severally pleaded not guilty. Ordered, that the trials of the two negroes, the Hughsons, and Kerry, come on to-morrow morning. Court adjourned till nine o’clock to-morrow morning. SUPREME COURT. Saturday, April 25.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse.38 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE The King against Caesar and Prince, negroes. The King against John Hughson, Sarah, his wife, Margaret Kerry. Ordered, that the prisoners’ trials be put off till Tuesday, the 28th instant. Court adjourned till nine o’clock Monday morning. SUPREME COURT. Monday, April 27.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse. His majesty’s ordinance published in court for enlarging the present term to the last Tuesday in May next. Court adjourned till ten o’clock to-morrow morning. SUPREME COURT. Tuesday, April 28.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The King against Caesar and Prince, negroes. The King against John Hughson, Sarah, his wife, Margaret Kerry. ■ Upon motion of Mr. Attorney General, ordered that the trials of the prisoners in both causes be put off till the first day of May. *• Court adjourned till Friday, 1st May, at ten o’clock in the morning. The-following letter, dated this day at New York, was some time afterwards intercepted in New Jersey, aftird sent up from a magistrate there to another here. The original in Dutch followeth, so much of it as is material to the present purpose. “Nieu York den 21 April 1741. “ Beminde Man Johannis Romme “ Dit is om U bekent te maken dat ik U brief ontfangen heb by de brenger van deze en daer nyt verstaen dat gey van sins ben om weer na huis te komen myn beminde ik versoek van U dat gy het best van U wegh maekt om varder te gaen en niet in Niu Yorck te komen en om U self niet bekent te maken waer gey ben voor John Husen die is van dese dagh zyn tryell te hebben enook zyn vrou en de mydt is king evidens tegen baye gar en zy het U naemook in kwetze gebrocht en ik ben bang det John Husen en zyn vrou gehangen sail worden by wat ik kan horen en de schout en bombeles soeken voor U over all want Fark neger die houdt zyn woort standen voor jou Brother LucasCONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 39 is voor een jeure man gekosen en die hoort hoe het is So niet maer maer bly vende U eerwarde vrou Elezabet Romme tot ter doet toe.” Thus translated: “ Beloved Husband John Romme, “ This is to acquaint you that I have received your letter by the bearer hereof and understand out of it that you intend to return home again my dear I desire of you that you make the best of your way to go further and not to come in New York and not to make yourself known where you are for John Hughson is this day to have his tryal as also his wife and the servant maid is king evidence against both and she has brought your name likewise in question and I am afraid that John Hughson and his wife will be hanged by what I can hear and the sheriff and bombailiffs seek for you every where Varack’s negro he keeps his word stedfast for you Brother Lucas is chosen one of the jurymen and he hears how it is So no more but remaining your respectful wife Elezabet Romme even till death.” Superscribed, for Mr. John Romme Q D G- SUPREME COURT. Friday, May 1.—Present Mr. Justice Philipse, and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The King against Csesar and Prince, negroes. On trial. The jury called, and the prisoners making no challenge, the following persons were sworn, viz.: Roger French, Patrick Jackson, John Groesbeek, Benjamin Moore, John Richard, William Hamersley, Abraham Kipp, John Lashier, George Witts, Joshua Sleydall, John Thurman, John Shurmur. These two negroes were arraigned on two indictments, the twenty-fourth of April last: the one for their entering the dwelling house of Robert Hogg, of this city, merchant, on the first day of March then last past, with intent then and there to commit some felony ; and for feloniously stealing and carrying away then and there goods and chattels of the said Robert Hogg, of the value of four pounds five shillings sterling, against the form of the statutes in such case made and provided, and40 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE against the peace of our sovereign lord the king, his crown and dignity. The other for their entering the dwelling house of Abraham Meyers Cohen in this city, merchant, on the first day of March with intent then and there to commit some felony; and for felo- niously stealing and carrying away then and there the goods and chattels of the said Abraham Meyers Cohen, of the value of five pounds sterling, against the form of the statutes, and against the king’s peace. To each of which indictments they pleaded not guilty. The Attorney General having opened both the indictments, he with Joseph Murray, Esq., of counsel for the king, pro- ceeded to examine the witnesses, viz : For the king, Mrs. Hogg, Mrs. Boswell, Christopher Wilson, Rachina Guerin, Mr. Robert Hogg, Mr. Robert Watts, Marga- ret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, Abraham Meyers Cohen, James Mills, Thomas Wenman, John Moore, Esq., Cornelius Brower, Anthony Ham, Mary Barton. For the prisoners, Alderman Bancker, Alderman Johnson, John Auboyneau. The prisoners upon their defence denied the charge against them. And, The evidence being summed up, which was very strong and full, and the jury charged, they withdrew; and being returned, found them guilty of the indictments. Ordered, that the trials of the Hughsons and Margaret Kerry be put off until Wednesday the 6 th inst. Court adjourned until Monday morning, 4th May, at ten o’clock. Sunday, May 3.—Arthur Price, servant of Captain Vincent Pearse, having been committed upon a charge of stealing out of his master’s house goods belonging to the Lieutenant Gov- ernor, which had been removed thither for safe custody from the fire at the fort; he informed the under-sheriff that he had had some discourse in the jail with Peggy, which he -would communicate to a magistrate : the under-sheriff acquainted one of the judges therewith, and he examined Price in the evening, and the following deposition was taken :— Deposition, No. 1.—Arthur Price being duly sworn, saith, 1. “ That about the beginning of last week, Peggy Carey, or Kerry, now in jail, came to the hole in the prison door, in which he is confined, and told him she was very much afraid of those fellows (meaning the negroes, as he understood) tell- ing or discovering something of her; but, said she, if they do,CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 41 by God, I will bang them, every one; but that she would not forswear herself, unless they brought her in. Upon which the deponent asked her, Peggy, how forswear yourself ? To which she answered, there is fourteen sworn. Upon which he further asked her, what, is it about Mr. Hogg’s goods ? And she re- plied, no, by G—d, about the fire. Upon which the deponent said to her, what, Peggy, were you going to set the town on fire ? And she made answer, she was not; but said, by G—d, since I knew of it, they made me swear. Upon which the deponent asked her, was John and his wife in it? (meaning John Hughson and his wife). And she answered, yes, by G—d, they were both sworn as well as the rest. Then the deponent asked her,*if she was not afraid that the negroes would discover her ? And she said no; for Prince, Cuff, and Caesar, and Forck’s (Varack’s) negro, were all true-hearted fellows. Then he asked her, if Caesar was not Forck’s negro ? And she answered, no, by G—d, it was the other ; but what other she meant he did not know. 2. " That yesterday in the afternoon the said Peggy came to him again, and told him, she had no stomach to eat her victuals ; for that that bitch (meaning Hughson’s maid, as he understood) has fetched me in, and made me as black as the rest, about the indigo, and Mr. Hogg’s goods; but if they did hang the two poor fellows below (meaning Caesar and Prince, as understood) they (meaning the rest of the negroes) would be revenged on them yet; but if they sent them away, it was another case. Upon which this deponent said to Peggy, I don’t doubt but they will endeavor to poison this girl that has sworn, (meaning Hughson’s maid). And Peggy replied, no, by G—d, I don’t believe that; but they will be revenged on them some other ways: And she further said to the deponent, for your life and soul of you, you son of a b—h, don’t speak a word of what I have told you.” About this time, i.e. the beginning of this month, at Hacken- sack, in New Jersey, eight miles from this city, the inhabitants of that place were alarmed about an hour before day, and pre- sented with a most melancholy and affrighting scene! no less than seven barns in that neighborhood were all in flames ; and the fire had got such head, that all assistance was in vain ; for in a short time they were burnt down to the ground. , Two negroes, the one belonging to Derick Van Hoorn, the other to Albert Van Voerheise, were suspected to have been guilty of this act; the former having been seen coming out of one of the barns with a loaded gun, who pretended, on his being dis- covered, that he saw the person who had fired the barns, upon42 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE which his master ordered him to fire at him, and the negro thereupon immediately discharged his piece. The latter was found at his master’s house loading a gun with two bullets, which he had in his hand ready to put in. Upon these and other presumptive circumstances and proofs, both negroes were apprehended, and in a few days tried, convicted, and burnt at a stake—the former confessed that he had set fire to three of the barns ; the latter would confess nothing., SUPREME COURT. Monday, May 4.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. • The Court opened and adjourned till to-morrow afternoon at three o’clock. SUPREME COURT. Tuesday, May 5.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The Court opened and adjourned till to-morrow morning 9 o’clock. SUPREME COURT. Wednesday, May 6.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, and Justice Horsmanden. The King against John Hughson, Sarah his wife, Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, on trial. The Jury were called and the following jurors sworn, viz.:— John Shurmur, John Hastier, John Robins, Henry Vandewater, Aaron King, Alexander Ward. Benjamin Peck and Joseph North, jurors challenged by the prisoners. They were indicted for feloniously, &c., receiving on the third day of March then last past, divers stolen goods, knowing the same to have been stolen, against the form of the statute, and the king’s peace. To which indictment they all pleaded, not guilty, upon their arraignment as before.- Henry Lawrence, William Hammersley, Sidney Breese, John Smith, Samuel Weaver, Patrick Jackson,CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 43 Council for the King, the Attorney General, and Joseph Murray, Esq. The Attorney General opened the indictment, and then he and Mr. Murray examined the witnesses against the criminals, viz.:—Witnesses for the king—Robert Hogg, Mrs. Hogg, Rachina Guerin, Anthony Ham, constable, Alderman Romme, Robert Watts, Esq., Richard Nicholls, Esq., James Mills, Mary Burton, Alderman Moore, Thomas Wenman, constable, John Cruger, Esq., mayor, Alderman Johnson, William Ja- mison, Esq. The conviction of Caesar and Prince read. The examination of Hughson before the justices read. Witnesses for the prisoners—John Nichols, Capt. Lee, Peter Anderson, and his wife. And the charge against them being fully proved; the evi- dence summed up; the arguments closed, and the jury charged, they withdrew; and being returned, found them all guilty. Sarah Hughson, single woman, daughter of John Hughson and Sarah his wife, was this morning committed as one of the confederates in the conspiracy, being apprehended while the court was sitting. Court adjourned till ten o’clock to-morrow morning. Jack (Sleydall’s negro) was this day committed on suspicion of putting fire to Mr. Murray’s haystack. SUPREME COURT. Thursday, May 7, a.m.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. Court opened, and adjourned until 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Present, as before. Court opened and adjourned until to- morrow morning, 10 o’clock. Deposition taken before the judges.—No. 2. Arthur Price being duly sworn, saith, 1. “ That yesterday morning having discourse with Sarah, the daughter of John Hughson, about the fires which have lately happened in the town, she told him that she had been with a fortune-teller, who told her that in less than five weeks’ time she would come to trouble, if she did not take good care of herself, but after that she would come to good fortune ; then he inquired of her father’s fortune, and she said her father would be tried and condemned, but not hanged, but was to go over the water. 2. “ That then, after some other discr "”,se. the deponent44 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE told her that some of the negroes who were concerned in the plot about the fires, had discovered; upon which she said she did not know of any plot; and thereupon he told her that they that were sworn in the plot, had discovered and brought them every one in, upon which she colored, and put her bonnet back, and changed color several times, and asked him if he knew who it was, and when he had heard it ? and he told her he had heard it by the by, and it was kept private, upon which she made a long stop, and then said, it must be either Holt's negro, or Todd’s ; for, said she, we were always afraid of them, and mistrusted them, though they were as bad as the rest, and were to have set their own master’s houses on fire ; and then she said, I wish that Todd had sent his black dog away, or sold him, when he was going to do it. 3. “ That then the deponent told her, sure you had better tell everything that you know; for that may be of some ser- vice to your father; upon which she said, no, for that they were doing all that they could to take his life away; and that she would sooner suffer death, and be hanged with her daddy (if he was to be hanged), than she would give them that satis- faction of telling or discovering anything to them, or words to that effect; that she was to have gone up into the country (like a fool that she was that she did not go), but staid to see what would become of her mammy and daddy ; but that now she would go up in the country, and that she would be hanged if ever they should get her in York again; but if they (mean- ing the people of this city, as he understood) had not better care of themselves, they would have a great deal more damage and danger in York than they were aware of; and if they did hang her daddy, they had better do something else ; and as to the fire at the fort, they did not set the saddle on the right horse. 4. “ That on Monday last Peggy came to him, and bid him not discover anything for his life, that she had told him; for if he did, by God she would cut his throat! 5. “ The deponent further saith, that as to the expression made use of by Sarah Hughson, viz. As to the fire at the fort, they did not set the saddle on the right horse; the occa- sion of these words was, the deponent’s telling her that they had been picking out of him what they could concerning the fire at the fort, and thought that he knew something of it; but he said to her, that he took God to be his judge that he did not know anything of it.” Upon the information by this deposition, Dundee (Todd’sCONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 45 negro) was apprehended and committed; but upon examina- tion, denied knowing anything of the conspiracy. The other negro was at this time gone with his master (Holt), a dancing-master, to Jamaica, in the West Indies, who thought it proper to remove from hence soon after the fire at the fort. Voluntary confession.—Margaret Sarinbirr, alias Keary, de- clares, “That she was several times at the house of John Homme, shoemaker, and tavern-keeper, and saw several meet- ings of the negroes from time to time ; and in particular in the month of December last past, she saw assembled there in or about ten or twelve in number, viz.—Cuff, belonging to Mr. Philipse; Brash, Mr. Jay’s; Curacoa Dick, a negro man; Caesar, Pintard’s; Patrick, English’s; a negro belonging to Mr. Breasted, in Pearl-street (Jack), Cato, Alderman Moore’s. “ The rest of the names that were in the combination, I cannot remember, or their master’s names. They proposed to burn the fort first, and afterwards the city; and then steal, rob and carry away all the money and goods they could pro- cure, and was to be carried to Romme’s, and were to be joined by the country negroes, and that they were to murder every one that had money. “ The reason why I did not make this discovery before, Romme swore them all never to discover, and swore me too; and I thought I would wrong my own soul, if I discovered it. And that all the rest of the negroes in city and country were to meet in one night. “ All the above I am ready to declare upon oath.” Signed with her mark X. This declaration was sent from the jail, by the under-sheriff, to one of the judges late this night. The conviction of the two negroes, Caesar and Prince, as principals in the two robberies; and of Hughson, his wife, and Peggy herself, as accessories in receiving the goods stolen ; alarmed her so, that she seemed now to think it high time to do something to recommend herself to mercy ; and this con- fession coming voluntarily from her, it gave hopes that she was in earnest, and would make some material discoveries. SUPREME COURT. Friday, May 8.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The King against Caesar and Prince, negroes. The prisoners having been capitally convicted on two several46 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE indictments for felony, and being brought to the bar, the court proceeded to give sentence; which was passed by Mr. Justice Philipse as followeth: “ You, Caesar and Prince, the grand jury having found two indictments against each of you, for feloniously stealing and taking away from Mr. Hogg, and Mr. Meyers Cohen, sundry goods of considerable value. To these indictments you seve- rally pleaded not guilty; and for your trials put yourselves upon God and the country ; which country having found you guilty, it now only remains for the court to pronounce that judgment which the law requires, and the nature of your crimes deserves. “ But before I proceed to sentence, I must tell you, that you have been proceeded against in the same manner as any white man, guilty of your crimes, would have been. You had not only the liberty of sending for your witnesses; asking them such questions as you thought proper; but likewise making tbe best defence you could ; and as you have been convicted by twelve honest men upon their oaths, so the just judgment of God has at length overtaken you. “ I have great reason to believe, that the crimes you now stand convicted of, are not the least of those you have been concerned in; for by your general characters you have been very wicked fellows, hardened sinners, and ripe, as well as ready, for the most enormous and daring enterprises, especially you, Caesar: and as the time you have yet to live is to be but very short, I earnestly advise and exhort both of you to employ it in the most diligent and best manner you can, by confessing your sins, repenting sincerely of them, and praying God of his infinite goodness to have mercy on your souls: and as God knows the secrets of your hearts, and cannot be cheated or imposed upon, so you must shortly give an account to him, and answer for all your actions; and depend upon it, if you do not truly repent before you die, there is a hell to punish the wicked eternally. “ And as it is not in your powers to make full restitution for the many injuries you have done the public; so I advise both of you to do all that in you is, to prevent further mischiefs, by discovering such persons as have been concerned with you, in designing or endeavoring to burn this city, and to destroy its inhabitants. This I am fully persuaded is in your power to do if you will; if so, and you do not make such discovery, be as- sured God Almighty will punish you for it, though we do not: therefore I advise you to consider this well, and I hope both of you will tell the truth.CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 47 “ And now, nothing further remains for me to say, but that you Caesar, and you Prince, are to be taken hence to the place from whence you came/and from thence to the place of execu- tion, and there you, and each of you, are to be hanged by the neck until you he dead. And I pray the Lord to have mercy on your souls.” Ordered, that their execution be on Monday next, the eleventh day of this instant, between the hours of nine andJ one of the same day. And further ordered that after the execution of the said sentence, the body of Caesar be hung in chains. Court adjourned till ten o’clock Monday morning next. Peggy was examined by the judges touching the matter of her confession delivered in writing last night, which she declared for truth; and for the greater solemnity was sworn to it, after having been seriously admonished not to dare td say any- thing but the truth, or to accuse innocent persons; she was told, that we had dived so far into this mystery of iniquity already, that we could easily discern whether she prevaricated or not; and that if she did, she must not flatter herself with the hopes of being recommended to mercy; so that such disingenuous behavior would but deceive herself, and make her case despe- rate, or words to that purpose: she put on the air of sincerity, as if disposed to make a discovery, but seemed to be under ter- rible apprehensions. What she said, corresponded with the scheme of the plot so far as we had got light into it, and in a great measure confirmed what Arthur Price said in his deposi- tion, No. 1, before, with this difference, that she shifted the scene from John Hughson’s to John Romme’s, and protested that she did not know that the Hughsons were any wise privy to, or concerned in the conspiracy. At this examination, she related a great many particulars, which for want of time, were not committed to writing; but her further examination deferred to the next day. Romme at this time absconded ; orders having been given for apprehending him long before, upon suspicion of his having received some of the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg’s; and Peggy and her advisers might think as he was out of reach, she might safely shift the scene to his house; or this bloody scheme might have been brooding at both places, and with her knowledge; but one may be persuaded, from the course of the evidence, that Romme was apprised at least of the conspiracy carrying on at Hughson’s. Upon this examination, Romme’s wife was apprehended and committed.48 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE Saturday. May 9.—Many hours were taken up in Peggy’s examination yesterday and this day; which was committed to writing, as followeth :— Examination taken before the judges, No. 1. Margaret Salingburgh, alias Kerry, saith, 1. “ That some time last fall she took lodgings with one Frank, a free negro, fronting the new battery, within this city, about three or four doors from the house of John Romme, shoemaker, and continued there till the beginning of February last, during which time she employed the said Romme in making shoes for her; and on that account became acquainted with him and his wife, and used often to go backwards and forwards to and from the said house ; by which means she had the opportunity of seeing many negroes there at several different times, who used to resort thither to drink drams, punch and other strong liquors, the said Romme keeping a public house; and that often numbers of them have continued at the said Romme’s house till two or three o’clock in the morning, to her knowledge, drink- ing, singing and playing at dice. 2. “ That on or about the beginning of November last, on a Sunday evening, between the hours of 11 and 12, she (the ex- aminant) being returning home to her said lodging, by the way of Whitehall, saw two negroes coming towards her with each of them a firkin upon their shoulders, and saw them turn into Romme’s gate ; and that presently after the same two negroes returned from the said Romme’s house, and went by the exami- nant (who stood under Hunt’s shed) at some distance towards the water side; and returned again by her, with each of them one firkin more upon each of their shoulders, and went with them also in at the said Romme’s gate, and returned by the examinant a second time, and went towards the water side ; and in the same manner made as many turns, till the examinant counted that the said negroes had carried into the said Romme’s gate, sixteen of the said firkins : and the reason of the exami- nant’s staying under the said Hunt’s shed to observe the mo- tions of the said negroes was, because she suspected them to be stolen goods. 3. “ That one evening, some time about Christmas last, about eight or nine o’clock, she was at the house of the said John Romme where she saw in company, together with the said Romme and his wife, ten or eleven negroes, all in one room, and the said John Romme was observing to the negroes, how well the rich people at this place lived, and said, if they (mean- ing the negroes, as she understood) would be advised by him, they (including himself and the negroes as she understood)CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 49 should have the money. To which Cuff (Mr. Philipse’s negro) replied, how will you manage that ? Well enough, said Romme, set them all a light fire ; burn the houses of them that have the most money, and kill them all, as the negroes would have done their masters and mistresses formerly: That he (Romme) should be captain over them (meaning, the negroes, as the ex- aminant understood) till they could get all their money, and then he (Romme) would be governor. To which Cuff said, they could not do it. Yes, says Romme, we’ll do well enough ; we’ll send into the country for the rest of the negroes to help, because he could write, and he knew several negroes in the country that could read. And he encouraged them, and said, he would stand by them, and that the sun would shine very bright by and by, and never fear my lads : But that if it should happen that anything should come out, he would make his escape, and go to North Carolina, Cape Fear, or somewhere thereabouts ; or into the Mohawk’s country, where he had lived before; but besides, the d—1 could not hurt him; for he had a great many friends in town, and the best in the place would stand by him; or the said Romme expressed himself in words to the effect before mentioned. 4. That during all the discourse of the said Romme to the negroes as above mentioned, she did not observe any of the said number of ten or eleven, to make any answer to Romme’s discourse aforesaid, excepting Cuffee (Philipse’s), Curacoa Dick, Pintard’s Caesar, Will (Weaver’s, since dead), and Mr. Moore’s Cato; but Cuffee spoke the most, and said, “ The devil take the failerthough the other four seemed to be as forward for the plot as Cuff. 5. “ That the other negroes that were present at the above discourse, whose persons or names she now remembers, were Patrick (English’s), Jack (Breasted’s), and Brash (Mr. Jay’s). 6. “ That at the same meeting there were several other negroes, which made up the number to ten or eleven, whose names, or the names of their masters, she does not now remember, but believes she should remember their faces again if she should see them. 7. “ That at the same meeting, the said John Romme pro- posed to the said negroes present, * To bum the fort first, and afterwards the city; and then to steal and rob, and carry away all the money and goods they could procure;’ and that they should be brought to Romme’s house, and he would take care to hide them away. 8. “ That Romme said further, that if the fire did not suc- ceed, and they could not compass their ends that way, then he 450 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE proposed to the negroes present, that they should steal all that they could from their masters; then he would carry them to a strange country, arid give them their liberty, and set them free. After this Romme asked them if it would do ? That is whether the negroes then present liked his proposals (as she understood). To which Cuff answered, ‘ There’s great talking, and no cider,’ and so they broke up. And the negroes remain- ing at that time all departed, some of them, to wit, Brash, Patrick, Jack, and the several other negroes (whose names the examinant cannot at all remember), having left the com- pany about an hour before ; but Cuff, Curacoa Dick, Weaver’s Will, Cato, and Pintard’s Caesar staid till the last. 9. “ That she well remembers that Cuff, Curacoa Dick, Weaver’s Will, Pintard’s Caesar, and Mr. Moore’s Cato, and also Auboyneau’s Prince, and Varack’s Caesar, used much to frequent that house in the evenings, and to stay often late in the night, drinking and playing at dice, but she never heard any discourse amongst them about burning the fort, or setting fire to the town, but the time above mentioned. 10. “ That immediately after the negroes broke up the meeting before mentioned, the said John Romme insisted upon this examinant’s being sworn to secrecy, that she would not discover anything that she knew had passed in his house, either relating to the butter, or the fire, or discourse at the said meeting, which she accordingly was, and kissed a book; what book it was knows not. 11. “ That Romme’s wife was by all or most part of the time during the meeting and discourse aforesaid ; and when Romme insisted that this examinant should be sworn as afore- said, as well as his wife—for the said Romme declared they were both sworn to secrecy, and all the negroes; but the examinant saith, that the said Romme’s wife did not at all join in any of the discourse before mentioned.” Elizabeth Romme, wife of John Roirime, was sent for and examined concerning what Peggy had declared to have passed at her house. Examination.—1. She denied, “ That she knew anything at all ^bout the conspiracy for firing the fort and the town, and murdering the people. 2. “ Denied there were ever such companies of negroes met at her house as Peggy declared. 3. “ She confessed there had been some firkins of butter brought thither about the time mentioned by Peggy ; but said that they were received by her husband, and she knew nothing of them.CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 51 4. “ Denied she had ever heard or knew of any oath of secrecy imposed by her husband, or administered by him to her or Peggy, or any other person whatsoever, with regard to secrecy concerning the stolen butter, or any other goods, or concerning the conspiracy. 5. “ Confessed that a negro (the father of Mr. Philipse’S Cuffee) kept game-fowls at their house, and used to come there to bring them victuals, but never used to stay long. Confessed that he was there about Christmas last. And 6. “ That the last winter Cuff’s father brought them sticks of wood now and then, and she believed he had them out of his master’s yard. 1. “ Confessed that negroes used to come to their house to drink drams, but never used to stay; that Caesar (Yarack’s negro) used to come morning and evening often, Auboyneau’s Prince sometimes, Mr. Moore’s Cato once or twice, and not oftener, as she remembered ; never saw Breasted, the hatter’s negro, there at all, nor Mr. Jay’s Brash, nor Patrick (English’s negro), but had seen Bastian (Yarack’s negro) there, and Mr. Pintard’s Caesar; but never saw above three negroes at a time there, and that very seldom ; and that when there were three, they were always Cuffee (Philipse’s), Caesar (Varack’s), and Prince (Auboyneau’s).” This afternoon orders were given for apprehending the several negroes, mentioned by Peggy to have been present at Romme’s, at the time she said Romme and the negroes were talking of the conspiracy ; those of them whom she knew by name, and were not before committed, were soon found and brought to jail. In the evening the judges came to the City Hall, and sent for Peggy, and had the several negroes brought one by one, and passed in review before her, viz.: Patrick (English’s), Cato (Col. Moore’s), Curacoa Dick, Csesar (Alderman Pintard’s) Brash (Mr. Jay’s), and Jack (Breasted’s), and she distinguished them every one, called them by their names, and declared those were at the above-mentioned meeting. These negroes were each of them separately examined, and denied being at any such meeting, or that they knew any- was brought by mistake instead of-Patrick,'and Peggy declared he was not English’s negro which she meant. Cork was unfortunately of a coun- tenance somewhat ill-favored, naturally of a suspicious look, and reckoned withal to be unlucky too. His being sent for be- fore the magistrates in such a perilous season might be thought thing of the conspiracy. At first Cork (English’s negro)52 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE sufficient to alarm the most innocent of them, and occasion the appearance of their being under some terrible apprehensions, but it was much otherwise with Cork, and notwithstanding the disadvantage of his natural aspect, upon his being inter- rogated concerning the conspiracy, he showed such a cheerful, open, honest smile upon his countenance (none of your ficti- tious hypocritical grins) that every one that was by, and ob- served it (and there were several in the room), came imme- diately to the opinion that they never saw the fellow look so handsome. Such an efficacy have truth and innocence that they even reflect beauty upon deformity! On the contrary, Patrick’s visage betrayed his guilt. Those who are used to negroes may have experienced that some of them, when charged with any piece of villainy they have been detected in, have an odd knack or (it is hard what to call or how to describe it) way of turning their eyes inwards, as it were, as if shocked at the consciousness of their own perfidy, their looks, at the same time, discovering all the symptoms of the most inveterate malice and resentment—this was Patrick’s appearance, and such his behavior upon examination as served to induce one’s credit to what Peggy had declared ; so far at least that he was present at a meeting when the conspiracy was talked of, and was one of the persons consenting to act a part in that infernal scheme; so that he was committed to jail, and the rest of them, whom Peggy declared as they were produced, to be the persons she meant. These negroes, impeached by Peggy, and committed upon her information, and which had passed in review before her, were likewise shown to Mary Burton, who declared that she did not remember that ever she saw any of them at Hughson’s, which seemed to add strength to what Peggy had declared in her examination, that this villainous scheme was carrying on at Romme’s as well as Hughson’s. Deposition taken before one of the judges.—Abigail Earle, being sworn, deposeth, “ that just before the going in of the afternoon church, on the same Sunday that coals were found in Mr. Murray’s haystack, she saw three negro men coming up Broadway; that she was then looking out of her window up one pair of stairs in the house where Mr. Williams now lives; and as they passed under the window, she heard one of them say, viz., Dire, fire, scorch, scorch, a little, damn it, by and by ! and then threw up his hands and laughed. That after the said negroes were gone by she went into Mrs. George’s house and told her what she had heard : and about an hour after, when church was out, she saw the same negroesCONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 53 coming down Broadway; and then showed Mrs. George the negro that had spoke the aforesaid words: whereupon Mrs. George said, that is Mr. Walter’s Quaco.” Lydia George being sworn, deposed, “ that she heard the above written deposition of Abigail Earle read, and knows that all therein mentioned, which any ways relates to her, the de- ponent, is true.” Upon these depositions Quaco was recommitted this evening. Sunday, May 10.—A young negro fellow of Mrs. Carpen- ter’s had given some information, that Sarah, (Niblet’s negro wench) had told him that Sawney, alias Sandy (Niblet’s negro boy of about 16 or 17 years of age) had been concerned in setting the fort on fire ; that he had likewise set Muchado’s house, next door to his master’s, on fire; and had also thrown fire over Alderman Bancker’s fence into his yard. This negro fellow was sent for, and likewise Sarah (Niblet’s), and he de- clared before one of the judges and others, to Sarah’s face, to the same purpose. The wench seemed to be under great terror, and trembled much ; but nothing could be got out of her more than a peremptory denial that she had ever said any such things to the above negro. Sarah was committed. Sandy had then lately been sent away by his master to Albany in order to be sold ; but orders were immediately sent to bring him back. Niblet the master was sent for, and examined as to the characters of these servants; but he said, he knew no harm of them. SUPREME COURT. Monday, May 11.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse. Ordered, that the gibbet on which the body of the negro Caesar is to be hanged in chains, be fixed on the island near the powder house. Court adjourned till Monday morning, ten o’clock. Caesar and Prince were executed this day at the gallows, according to sentence. They died very stubbornly, without confessing anything about the conspiracy; and denied they knew anything of it to the last. The body of Caesar was ac- cordingly hung in chains. These two negroes bore the characters of very wicked idle fellows; had before been detected in some robberies, for which they had been publicly chastised at the whipping-post,54 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE and were persons of most obstinate and untractable tempers ; so that there was no expectation of drawing anything from them which would make for the discovery of the conspiracy, though there seemed good reason to conclude, as well from their characters as what had been charged upon them by in- formation from others, that they were two principal ring- leaders in it amongst the blacks. It was thought proper to execute them for the robbery, and not wait for the bringing them to a trial for the conspiracy, though the proof against them was strong and clear concerning their guilt as to that also; and it was imagined, that as stealing and plundering was a principal part of the hellish scheme in agitation, amongst the inferior sort of these infernal confederates, this earnest of example and punishment might break the knot, and induce some of them to unfold this mystery of iniquity, in hopes thereby to recommend themselves to mercy, and it is probable, that with some it had this effect. SUPREME COURT. Tuesday, May 12.—Present, Mr. Justice Philipse, and Mr. Justice Horsmanden. The King against John Hughson, and Sarah, his wife. The prisoners, John Hughson and Sarah his wife having been indicted for conspiring, confederating and combining with divers negroes and others, to bum the city of New York, and also to kill and destroy the inhabitants thereof, were set to the bar and arraigned on the said indictment; and thereupon pleaded, not guilty. Margaret Kerry was also included in this indictment; but she being in a disposition, as it was thought at that time, for making a discovery, it was judged proper to postpone her arraignment. Court adjourned to Friday the 15th instant, ten o’clock in the morning. Arthur Price having been found by experience to j?e very adroit at pumping out the secrets of the conspirators, in the two instances of Peggy and Sarah Hughson the daughter, before set forth; the under-sheriff was ordered to put Cuffee (Mr. Philipse’s negro) into the same cell with him, and to give them a tankard of punch now and then, in order to cheer up their spirits, and make them more sociable. These directions were accordingly observed, and produced the desired effects ; and one of the judges being acquainted that Arthur had some-CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 55 thing to communicate he went up this morning in order to ex- amine him. Deposition taken before one of the judges, JVo. 3.—Arthur Price being duly sworn, saith, 1. “ That having discourse on Saturday night last, with Cuffee, a negro slave belonging to Mr. Philipse, he, the said Cuffee, amongst other discourse, said, that he was one of the Geneva club* that was sworn; but being overcome with sleep, he did not go to their meet- ing at that time: that Cuffee asked the deponent what could be the reason that Peggy was called down so often ? The deponent replied, he thought Peggy was discovering the plot about the fire; that he had heard she had discovered about the fire at the fort; Cuffee replied, she could not do that unless she forswore herself, he knew; for that he that had done that was sworn after she (Peggy) was in prison ; he (Cuffee) left his master’s house in the evening, and went along the wharves to the Fly Market, and waited there till one Quaco came out of his master’s house; they two then went to the house of John Hughson, where they met nobody but John Hughson, his wife, and daughter Sarah; that they (the two negroes) called for a tankard of punch; that Hughson swore Quaco three times; that they only drank out their punch, and then went down to the Fly. That this deponent then said, I be- lieve I know this Quaco, and that he lived with a butdher; Cuffee replied, no; he doth not live with a butcher, but he lived with a painter, who lived within a few doors of a butcher; * There was a confederacy of negroes, of which Caesar (Varack’s) and Prince (Auboyneau’s) both hanged yesterday, and Cuffee (Mr. Philipse’s) were the heads and ringleaders; who robbed, pilfered and stole whenever they had an opportunity: and it happened about five or six years ago, a cellar of one Baker, a tavern-keeper in this city, had one night been broken open, and robbed of some Geneva; many of the parties concerned were detected, viz., several negroes, of which Caesar and Prince were two principals; and all that were discovered were chastised at the public whipping-post. From thence it may be supposed they became distinguished among each other by the name of the Geneva Club; for they used frequently to be junketing together at nights with Cuff, upon the produce of the spoils of their pilfering. But it came out upon the examination of these negroes, that they had before that time the impudence to assume the style and title of Free Masons, in imita- tion of a society here; which was looked upon to be a gross affront to the provincial grand master and gentlemen of the fraternity at that time, and was very ill accepted; however, from this time the negroes may be supposed to have declined their pretensions to this title; for we heard nothing more of them afterwards under that style. But it is probable that most of this Geneva Club that were sworn (as Cuff said) were of the conspiracy; and it is likely that by the swearing, Cuff meant, sworn of the conspiracy.56 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE which painter’s name he understood to be Roosevelt, aooortr ing to the best of his remembrance. 2. “ That Cuffee told him, that Quaco was married to a negro wench who is cook to the fort, to the governor as he understood; that they were all to meet at Hughson’s the Sunday after Quaco was sworn; but some came and some did not. That the deponent, upon some further discourse, asked Cuffee how Quaco could do it ? (meaning the setting fire to the house in the fort;) Cuffee answered, he could not tell how he did it; but that Quaco was to do it, and did do it. 3. “ That Cuffee said, they were to meet and have a club at John Hughson’s in the Easter holidays, but that the d—d constables hindered them. 4. “ That he asked Cuffee, whether he did not think that the firing would be found out; he replied, no, by G-d, he did not think it ever would. 5. “ That he further asked Cuffee, if he was not afraid that the two negroes who were to be executed on Monday, would discover (the affair about the firing of the fort and town mean- ing) ; Cuffee answered, he was not afraid of that; for that he was sure they would be burnt to ashes before they would discover it; he would lay his life on it. 6. “That yesterday the deponent having some further dis- course with Cuffee, he said, he wondered why they only took up the Long Bridge boys, and did not take up those of the Smith’s Fly ; for he believed, if the truth was knoijyn, they (the Smith’s Fly negroes meaning) were as much concerned as they (of the Long Bridge meaning).” Upon this deposition, Quaco (Roosevelt’s) was apprehended and committed, who was one of the Smith’s Fly Boys, as Cuffee called them. Wednesday, May 13.—This being the day appointed by the Lieutenant Governor’s proclamation, issued the 10th of April last, to be observed throughout the province, as a day of public fasting and humiliation, the same was reverently-and decently observed, particularly in this city, by persons of all persuasions ; the shops were all shut up, and persons of all ranks resorted to their respective places of divine worship, and seemed deeply affected with a sense of the calamities with which we had of late been visited : his most gracious majesty, for the vindicating the honor of his crown, having declared war against the king of Spain, the visitation which the pro- vince underwent with the severity of the cold weather the last winter, which reduced many families to extremity and want,CONSPIRATORS AT NEW YORK IN 1741. 57 by the loss of their cattle,