John Ury
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John Ury (? - August 29, 1741) was a white itinerant teacher who was suspected of being a Catholic priest and a Spanish spy during the New York Slave Insurrection of 1741. His ability to read Latin was cited as proof of this. Which denomination he actually belonged to is uncertain. The Catholic Encyclopedia mentions him as "a Catholic priest, who had exercised unostentatiously his sacred ministry in New Jersey, and had been engaged for about twelve months in teaching at Burlington." [1] He is said to have been opposed to the Glorious Revolution of 1689. [2]
He was the son of a former Secretary of The South Sea Company and a non-jurist.
He was named by Mary Burton, the prosecution's main witness, as "the real power behind the slave conspiracy." Based on this, he was taken into custody on June 24, 1741. He was arrained on 15 July and 22 July.
Having no lawyer willing to defend him, he defended himself at the trial. Throughout, Ury expressed his innocence. The chief prosecutor was Attorney General Richard Bradley.
He was officially found guilty of conspiracy.
He was convicted on July 29 and hanged on August 29.
[edit] Case name
William Kane _vs_. John Ury
[edit] References
- Martin Ignatius Joseph Griffin, The trial of John Ury (1899)
- "The Dying Speech of John Ury" (Franklin, 1741)
- The Defence of John Ury (Philadelphia: Franklin, 1741). [3]
- George W. Williams - History of the Negro Race in America From 1619 to 1880. Vol 1. Project Gutenberg EBook
[edit] Sources
- http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0SAF/is_1_29/ai_n9772269#continue
- Legacy: A Panicked Response To the 'Great Negro Plot'
- A List of White Persons taken into Custody on Account of the 1741 Conspiracy
- Terror in New York—1741 - Edwin Hoey, American Heritage Magazine, June 1974
- William Cooper Nell - The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution, With Sketches of Several Distinguished Colored Persons: To Which Is Added a Brief Survey of the Condition And Prospects of Colored Americans: Electronic Edition. (1855)
This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.