The full history of Atlantic slavery is scarcely taught in the US or the UK, and so it’s not surprising that few people in either country know much about Tacky’s revolt. https://www.theguardian.com/news/2024/mar/26/historic-revolt-forgotten-hero-empty-plinth-jamaica-slavery-chief-tacky
@estherschindler: The Wilmington Coup and Rosewood weren't taught in my school days but were in the kids'. Same for Rosewood.
Now... Texas, on the other hand... 😬 . And Alabama and Georgia. North Carolina still teaches them, about slavery and the US/colonial slave revolts. It mayn't be taught as much and as deeply, but then we have to pick what not to teach in its stead. In my day, WW2 got a LOT of class time; beating the Nazis, FDR and the New Deal, Lend-Lease, the war in the Pacific.
@estherschindler: The Arab and Inter-African slave trades get next to no play at all, and it often irritates the shit out of people when it is. Then there's Great Britain's move to active, imperialist anti-slavery and its subsequent exploits. it gets little to no play in the history of slavery.
History is complicated, but that doesn't fit neatly onto bumper stickers or headlines. That isn't even taking in account emotions and picking sides. History is deeply unfashionable for nearly everyone.