Maroons: Rebel Slaves in the Americas by Richard Price
The man who was to become the first African-American maroon arrived within a decade of Columbus' landfall on the very first slave ship to reach the Americas. One of the last maroons to escape from slavery was still alive in Cuba only 15 years ago. The English word "maroon" (The authors have chosen to spell "maroon" in lower case when it is used to refer to individuals who escaped from slavery. It is capitalized only when used generically to refer to contemporary peoples or ethnic groups.) derives from Spanish cimarrón -- itself based on an Arawakan (Taino) Indian root. Cimarrón originally referred to domestic cattle that had taken to the hills in Hispaniola, and soon after it was applied to American Indian slaves who had escaped from the Spaniards as well. By the end of the 1530s, the word had taken on strong connotations of being "fierce," "wild" and "unbroken," and was used primarily to refer to African-American runaways.
However, the word "maroon" as a color is of even more ancient origin, and the Chicago name comes from the color, which appears on all sorts of University regalia.
Rather like the fuss over naming teams "rebels," which attacked even schools clearly named for Scottish "rebels" (rising of '45), or, most hilariously, the "Performing Arts School Rebels" (think Jack Kerouac)!
25 posted on 04/18/2002 7:40:12 PM PDT by BohDaThone