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What Role Do Harps Play In Slavery

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Micaja "Big" Harp and Wiley "Little" Harp were cousins, born to brothers John and William Harpe who were Scottish immigrants who changed the spelling of their name to Harp before settling in Orange County, North Carolina. In 1775, the Big and Little Harp left North Carolina for Virginia, intending to find jobs as slave overseers. Their plans were disrupted by the American Revolution, when they took up arms for the British. Their primary interests in war, however, seemed to be in the opportunity for violence - they were known for their vicious taste for plunder, rape, and pillage. Little Harp was shot and wounded by Captain James Wood while during an attempted rape in North Carolina.
In 1780, the Harp boys left the irregulars and fought with …show more content…
When the captive women bore children, twice each, the Harps killed the newborns.
The two Harps, their captive wives, and four other men travelled to Tennessee. When one of the men, Moses Doss, expressed concern over the way the Harps treated their captives, the Harps killed him.
The seven remaining members of the group settled in a Cherokee village for the next twelve years and continued to fight alongside the Cherokee whenever the opportunity presented itself. In 1794, however, the Harps fled when American soldiers attacked the village.
The Harps moved from camp to camp for several years, but in 1797 they settled down near Knoxville, TN. Little Harp married a local minister's daughter named Sarah Rice, and Big Harp took control of both captive women.
In 1798 the Harps began killing without the sanction of battle. They killed men in Tennessee and Kentucky, disembowling their victims, filling their abdomens with rocks, and sinking them in the river. When a local innkeeper pointed law enforcement in the direction of the Harp boys, the pair were successfully captured and incarcerated, but quickly managed to escape. A posse was formed to recapture them, and the Harps took revenge by killing and mutilating one member's

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