During the First Maroon War, violent battles between Maroons and British colonists were frequent and violent. How then, after the peace treaties, did former enemies negotiate their new positions as allies? How did colonists accept this new status quo while balancing it with racial beliefs of the era? This article examines Maroon and colonist efforts to progress in a physically difficult and socially charged environment while living side-by-side with a large enslaved population. Ultimately, some influential planters, as opposed to poorer settlers, came to recognise the mutual benefits this uneasy peace provided. That is not to say these colonists were not fearful of the Maroons but that they recognised the usefulness of the Maroon communities.
CITATION STYLE
McKee, H. (2018). From violence to alliance: Maroons and white settlers in Jamaica, 1739-1795. Slavery and Abolition, 39(1), 27–52. https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039X.2017.1341016
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