Slavery in the United States
The slave- ship Brookes (1788) Fig Ilengthwise cross-section Fig IIbreadthwise cross-section: men Fig III breadthwise cross-section: women Fig IVlower deck with platforms Fig Vlower deck without platforms Fig VIhalf-deck with platforms Fig VIIhalf-deck with platforms Alower deck Blower deck: breath Cmen's section Dplatform: men's section Eboy's section Fplatforms: Gwomen's section Hplatforms: women's section Igun room Kquarter deck Lcabin
Inside a Slave Ship
19th Century: A diagram depicting the proper way to pack and ship slaves across the atlantic ocean
Massachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery in 1641
US Population Timeline First English settlement: Roanoke, Va 1785 Jamestown in : est. 210 Pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock in : est ,000 Puritans arrive in Massachusetts in : est Within 10 years, 20,000 Puritans arrive in Massachusetts : est. 27, : est. 51, : est. 84, : est. 114, : est. 155, : est. 213, : est. 275, : est. 357, : est. 474, : est. 654, : est. 889, : est. 1,207, : est. 1,610,000
1655 The First Slave Auction at New Amsterdam
Slave Sale Ad
1861: The selling of slaves at U.S. auctions was a profitable business venture for individuals looking to make a large profit on a minimal investment.
Charleston Slave Market
1857: A slave owner brands his slaves in order to help him "keep track of merchandise."
Punishments for slaves
Slave Codes Slave codes were laws meant to control slaves. These codes forbid slaves from learning to read, owning firearms, or marrying a white person. The penalty a slave faced for learning to read was having a thumb cut off! These laws also made the children born to slaves automatically slaves for life (generational slavery).
1823 Sugar slavery in Latin America
A cotton plantation on the Mississippi River
Anti-Slavery Lundy formed the first anti-slavery society in 1815
Human Rights and the Rights of Slaves
Summary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) Everyone has the right to: Be born free and should be treated in the same way Be treated as equals, despite differences in language, sex, colour etc. Life and to live in freedom and safety Be recognized by the law Be treated equally before the law Ask for help when their rights are not respected A fair trial To be presumed innocent until proven guilty Privacy Travel within and to and from their own country Asylum A nationality Marry Own property and things Freedom of thought, conscience and religion Freedom of opinion and expression Meet with others Take part in government and to vote Social security Work and join a trade union Rest and leisure An adequate standard of living and medical help Education Take part in their community’s cultural life Everyone is entitled to a social and international order that is necessary for these rights Everyone has the right not to: Be held in slavery Be hurt or tortured Be imprisoned unjustly Everyone: Must respect the rights of others No-one can take away any of the rights in this declaration
The rights of slaves 1764 Slaves are property and can be sold Masters can do as they like with their slaves Masters must destroy slave culture Slaves are given new names Slaves can be killed Slaves cannot marry Slaves cannot be educated Slaves must be locked up at night Slaves must wear a ball and chain Slaves cannot become Christians Slaves cannot possess property/sell anything All blacks are slaves Slaves’ children are the property of the master
Modern Slavery forced to work -- through mental or physical threat; owned or controlled by an 'employer', usually through mental or physical abuse or threatened abuse; dehumanized, treated as a commodity or bought and sold as 'property'; physically constrained or has restrictions placed on his/her freedom of movement.
My first boss bought me and beat me - Kadum, 18 Cambodia Dieusibon Delice ran away from the abuses he faced as a child domestic worker and is now living in a shelter in Haiti Many migrant workers are trafficked into the United States and are forced to harvest crops on farms in Florida Jiera (19, Lithuanian) was a victim of human trafficking. "My life has been ruined... They trafficked me into prostitution when I was 17." What Jiera thought was going to be a holiday in London became a nightmare before she escaped with the help of a Lithuanian punter. Whole families are in bonded labour. Kailash Bhika, 28, with his wife, Rambeti, 24, daughter Ratma, 4 and son Kalv (18 mo) Boy bonded labourer Pakistan (Sindh Province)