The Life and Exploits of Three-Fingerd Jack
By (Author) William Burdett
Contributions by Mint Editions
Mint Editions
Mint Editions
5th January 2022
United States
Hardback
46
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
The Life and Exploits of Three-Fingerd Jack (1801) is a book by William Burdett. Inspired by tales of legendary slave-turned-rebel Jack Mansong, as well as by a popular pantomime based on Jacks life, Burdett published his book to popular acclaim in England. In late eighteenth-century Jamaica, a runaway slave named Jack Three-Fingered Jack Mansong defied British law to establish a community of runaways in the densely forested Blue Mountains of what is now Sant Thomas Parish. Because his actions violated a controversial treaty between the Jamaican Maroons and the colonial authority, Jack and his comrades faced persecution from both groups. Knowing that his only choice was between freedom or death, Jack fought valiantly to the bitter end. In Burdetts version of events, Jacks story begins in Africa, where he goes by the name Mansong. Stolen into slavery and taken to the Caribbean, the war hero prepares to make his break for the mountains. The Life and Exploits of Three-Fingerd Jack also features a romantic subplot between the planters daughter Rosa and Captain Orford, an Englishman newly arrived in Jamaica. With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of William Burdetts The Life and Exploits of Three-Fingerd Jack is a classic of British-Jamaican literature reimagined for modern readers.
William Burdett is the author of The Life and Exploits of Three-Finger'd Jack (1801). While little is known about Burdett, his pamphlet is inspired by the story of Jack Mansong a. k. a. Three-Fingered Jack, an eighteenth-century leader of runaway slaves in the Colony of Jamaica. Burdett's novel went through several editions and seems to have been immensely popular in England.