Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

1857 Uprising in Press and Popular Sentiment

The British East India Company (BEIC) overwhelmingly recruited sepoys from northern India, followed by Madras and Bombay. Particularly in Bengal, British service had become a respected and privileged hereditary occupation. Yet that dynamic buckled as the British imposed new conditions, such as demands for overseas service and slower promotions, to name a few. Varied issues compounded with grievances, including a ban on caste markings and distinctions, as well as the issuance of cartridges reportedly greased with pig and cow fat that had to be opened with one’s teeth, an affront to Muslims and Hindus. Offenses of Indian values across socio-religious demographics helped galvanize the sepoy resistance as the BEIC lost the confidence of the Indian army that it had built. Rebel sepoys challenged British forces to restore the Mughal Empire under Bahadur Shah II (r. 1837–57) and to extend his rule throughout India. Americans, observing these events during their travels or from home, offered mixed responses. Some deplored the racial inequities of the BEIC, while others demonstrated growing sympathy for the British as they quelled uprisings that pitched Indians against their brethren, mirroring the growing dynamics in the United States leading up to the Civil War.

group of men including one sepoy soldier in flat boat propelled by two men with poles. Illustration of uniformed group on page with text. Additional llustration at top of British Cavalry crossing the ferry at Allahabad. King of Delhi captured and surrounded by soldiers in forest. One of a collection of 21 mounted original unsigned watercolor and wash drawings. Photo of bones before a bombed out structure Poetry printed in blue in two columns divided by single line within border of type ornaments. Mica painting of blue uniformed soldier on horseback Standing figure of Sepoy soldier in uniform and of wife, landscape background.