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Published byArline Carter Modified over 9 years ago
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Antebellum Slavery
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The Roots of Slavery Slavery was introduced in North America from the Carribean. First “Africans” arrive in 1619 in Jamestown, Va. Slavery gradually develops with three defining characteristics: –Racial – Hereditary –Chattel By 1750, all the British North American colonies had legalized slavery.
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Defining Slavery –1641: Massachusetts = first colony to recognize slavery as a legal status –1663: Virginia declares that children of slave mothers are slaves; –1690: South Carolina Slave Code adopted – modeled after Barbados Slave Code. –1705: Virgina Slave Code adopted defines all “negro, mulatto, and Indian servants” as property. Authorizes physical punishments including whipping, branding, cutting off ears, and mutilation. –1740: South Carolina “Negro Act” Response to the Stono Rebellion 1739 Prohibited slaves from learning to read or write, assembling, dressing in clothing other than an approved list.
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Slavery During the Revolutionary Period 1750 – 300,000 slaves in America (20% of the total population) American Revolution begins a discussion about freedom & the role of slavery in the United States Following the Revolution, many northern states began abolishing slavery 1787 – Northwest Ordinance bars slavery in the NW Territory
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1776 – Declaration of Independence drafted; includes a condemnation of the slave trade. References to the slave trade are removed at the request of southern delegates.
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1773-1777: Free blacks in Massachusetts submit a series of petitions urging an end to slavery. “they have…with all other men, a natural and unalienable right of freedom”
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1777-1783 – Over 5,000 African-American men serve in the Continental Army and Navy Many receive their freedom in reward for their service. By 1790, there will be 60,000 free blacks in the US; 250,000 by 1860 List of casualties from Lexington & Concord
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Slavery and the US Constitution 1787 – Constitutional Convention –A new, more powerful gov’t –Southerners demand protections for slavery Protections for slavery in the new Constitution –No interference with the slave trade for 20 years; –Fugitive slave law; –Gov’t will help put down “domestic insurrections”
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19 th Century Slavery As America expands, slavery expands. US doubles in size from 1800-1831 Slavery expands west into new territories in the South. 1793 – Cotton Gin
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Population US Population/ Slave Population 1780: 3.5 million / 575,000 1800: 5.3 million / 900,000 1830: 12.8 million / 2.5 million
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Slave Life Kin to kint 14 hr days 4 in 10 live to 60 years Dehumanizing slave auctions Info: WPA Slave Narratives
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Resistance to Slavery Running away –76% under 35; 89% are men –Underground Railroad Organized in the early 1800s By 1850, an estimated 50,000- 100,000 escape this way –Most runaways leave temporarily, hide-out, then are captured or return.
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Harriet Jacobs
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Revolt –The least common form of resistance. –All major slave revolts in American history are thwarted: 1739 Stono Rebellion – S.C. 1800 Prosser’s Plot – Va. 1822 Denmark Vesey Plot – S.C. 1831 Nat Turner’s Rebellion – Va. 1860 John Brown’s Raid – Va.
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Sabotage Feigning Illnesses Work slow downs Cultural Resistance –Slave songs –Religious practices –Learning to read / write
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