Slavery in America
It is well known that slavery plagued the United States for hundreds of years, with the first African Slaves being brought to America in 1619 to the Roanoke Colony. However, the system of slavery developed in the United States is unique because of the way in which early European settlers justified it, the specific climate conditions faced in America the 1700 and 1800’s, and a dependence on the system of slavery. No longer were indentured servants with their temporary contracts and free will a viable source of work for these farmers, who subsequently found themselves in need of permanent laborers. Fueled by capitalism, Southern farmers took full advantage of the prospects of slavery to create new and bigger workforces, which
…show more content…
In Theodore Steinberg’s book, “Down To Earth: Nature’s Role in American History,” he draws multiple correlations between the climate and the development of agricultural practices in the United States, yet he completely misses the connection between the development of slavery and the erratic climate in the United States at the time. According to Steinberg, “The period from 1750 to 1850 marked a transition away from the cooler temperatures of the Little Ice Age toward a warmer climate. Such change, however, brought with it unpredictable weather.” (Steinberg 48). Unpredictable weather, in my opinion, is a major understatement. From 8-month winters caused by volcanic eruptions to blizzards in the summer, the Eastern United States was a meteorologist’s worst nightmare for more than a hundred years. This unpredictable period of climatic shift meant those who relied on the land for food or money had to adjust their ways of life around the ever-changing weather. For example, following volcanic eruptions that lowered global temperatures, “The extended winter weather compelled many farmers to exhaust their winter fodder, leading them to slaughter their cattle rather than see them all starve. The cold weather also forced them to postpone planting.” (Steinberg 49). To have such unpredictable weather …show more content…
David Eltis, in his book, “Slavery in The Development of the Americas,” asks this exact question. According to Eltis, “early Modern Europeans were culturally inhibited from enslaving each other, while uninhibited from, if not encouraged to, enslave others.” (Eltis 36). When Eltis mentions “others” he specifically means the indigenous people of countries visited by the European nations. Contact between Africans and Europeans had been going on for centuries, and Eltis credits the initial transmission of African slavery to the New World to them. According to Eltis, “The taboo against enslaving fellow Europeans was far greater than the lure of foregone wealth and power. European values shaped the parameters of African New World Slavery.” (Eltis 34). The underlying issue with labor for European expansion into the Americas was that they had no workforce yet wished to profit greatly from the land. The Europeans’ solution was simple: large plantations in the Americas that shipped their crop back to the Old World where it could be sold for huge profits. Of course, to accomplish this, Europeans needed people to work on the plantations, so they sent ships to Africa, where they knew they
Throughout the book, The Origins of Slavery, the author, Betty Woods, depicts how religion and race along with social, economic, and political factors were the key factors in determining the exact timing that the colonist’s labor bases of indentured Europeans would change to involuntary West African servitude. These religion and racial differences along with the economic demand for more labor played the key roles in the formation of slavery in the English colonies. When the Europeans first arrived to the Americas in the late sixteenth century, at the colony of Roanoke, the thought of chattel slavery had neither a clear law nor economic practice with the English. However by the end of that following century, the demand for slaves in the
When the first nineteen slaves arrived in Virginia in 1619, an institution that would last more than two hundred years was created. These first slaves were treated more like how the indentured servants that came to the New World from England were. However, as time passed and the colonies grew larger, so did the institution of slavery. Even after the importing slaves internationally was banned in 1807 by Congress, the internal slave trade expanded exponentially. The growth and durability of slavery persisted until the end of the Civil War, a time period greater than the entire existence of the United States. The institution of slavery was not only able to endure through two hundred fifty of turbulent change in America, but it was able to advance. This is due to the mindsets of slavery as a “necessary evil” and a “positive good” coupled with the dependence on them for such a large portion of the economy. These factors can be observed in the narratives written by Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs.
As we already noted – in the 1800s expediency of slavery was disputed. While industrial North almost abandoned bondage, by the early 19th century, slavery was almost exclusively confined to the South, home to more than 90 percent of American blacks (Barney W., p. 61). Agrarian South needed free labor force in order to stimulate economic growth. In particular, whites exploited blacks in textile production. This conditioned the differences in economic and social development of the North and South, and opposing viewpoints on the social structure. “Northerners now saw slavery as a barbaric relic from the past, a barrier to secular and Christian progress that contradicted the ideals of the Declaration of Independence and degraded the free-labor aspirations of Northern society” (Barney W., p. 63).
The introduction of Africans to America in 1619 set off an irreversible chain of events that effected the economy of the southern colonies. With a switch from the expensive system of indentured servitude, slavery emerged and grew rapidly for various reasons, consisting of economic, geographic, and social factors. The expansion of slavery in the southern colonies, from the founding of Jamestown in 1607 to just before America gained its independence in 1775, had a lasting impact on the development of our nation’s economy, due to the fact that slaves were easy to obtain, provided a life-long workforce, and were a different race than the colonists, making it easier to justify the immoral act.
From its very inception, America has relied on the labor of slaves. When the first colonists arrived in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619, they brought supplies (tools, animals, seeds, etc.), their beliefs and cultures, and slaves. As the Revolutionary War was being fought, there was a redefinition and expansion of freedom for white men as well as a proliferation in the use of the word “slavery” because many Americans began to view their relationship with Britain as a form of enslavement . In the process of establishing America as an independent republic, the colonists were granted their freedom from the British government while slavery and the slave trade thrived. For many of the founding fathers, it was easy to justify slavery because of their racism and hypocrisy as well as the fact that their primary disagreement was with the slave trade, not slavery (the act of enslaving). As the juxtaposition between American freedom and slavery became interwoven in American history and politics, it restructured the social system and allowed for the proliferation of an oppressive race-based social system (as opposed to the former class system) and laid the foundation for the Civil War.
The earliest form of slavery in North America can be traced back to Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. There, they were called the “Twenty and Odd” and considered servants rather than slaves. Though little is known about this infamous event, this ‘trade’ continued of capturing Africans from Africa and bringing them to the colonies of Britain. The usage of slaves increased and were often used as field laborers on plantations, house workers, blacksmiths
The first American slaves were brought to the North American colony of Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. Their job was to aid in the production of crops such as tobacco as the Virginians “were desperate for labor, to grow enough to stay alive… needed labor, to grow corn for subsistence, to grow tobacco for export” (Zinn 24,25). The slaves that were being brought to the Americas were seen as builders of the economic foundations of the new nation and as time passed the ownership of slaves dwindled but inequality and segregation grew to be more prevalent in the U.S (“Slavery in America”). On January 1st, 1863 President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, an executive order which freed slaves in the United States not within the Confederacy, under Union Control. Two years later the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution which abolished slavery but many Southern States managed to create unattainable prerequisites for blacks to live, work or participate in society. With nearly one hundred years after the Emancipation Proclamation, African-Americans were still treated just as unequally. Oppression, race-inspired violence, segregation and an unequal world of disenfranchisement lingered across Southern States for African-Americans. The Jim Crow Laws
The crops grown on plantations and the slavery system changed significantly between 1800-1860. In the early 1800s, plantation owners grew a variety of crops – cotton, sugar, rice, tobacco, hemp, and wheat. Cotton had the potential to be profitable, but there was wasn’t much area where cotton could be grown. However, the invention of the cotton gin changed this - the cotton gin was a machine that made it much easier to separate the seeds from cotton. Plantation owners could now grow lots of cotton; this would make them a lot of money. As a result, slavery became more important because the demand for cotton was high worldwide. By 1860, cotton was the main export of the south. The invention of the cotton gin and high demand for cotton changed
The institution of slavery, which was a system in which African Americans were forced into labor and had their freedom restricted, was seen as a positive necessity to Southerners. Slavery was seen as though it was essential, it was seen as an entity they could not live without. The Peculiar Institution began in 1619 in Jamestown, Virginia when the colonist first began arriving in Colonial America. Slavery was first introduced when the colonists, who happened to be privileged in the sense that they never did their own work, needed to get their work done. Since no one wanted to do the work such as building houses, farming
The introduction of this book is very unique in that it gives a brief overview of American history that not many Americans were taught. The book fills in the blanks about how exactly our country started out being a small trading partner with European countries and in a few decades became the world’s largest economy. “For some fundamental assumptions about the history of slavery and the history of the United States remain strangely unchanged. The first major assumption is that, as an economic system a way of producing and trading commodities American slavery was fundamentally different from the rest of
As the Europeans set up colonies in America, they brought the plantation ideas with them, which led to the need for labor hence they tried to enslave the Native Americans to work in their mines and fields. The Native Americans were prone to diseases hence most of them died as a result of diseases and overworking. Apart from the ones who died, a number rebelled and formed alliances forcing the Europeans to look for other sources of labor. They started to acquire African slaves due to a number of reasons: The African slaves were more stronger and immune to a number of diseases in Europe and America; the Africans had no friends and family in America hence it was not easy for them to form alliances or to escape; they provided a permanent and a cheap source of labor; and most of them had worked on farms before in their
In the years from 1600 to 1783 the thirteen colonies in North America were introduced to slavery and underwent the American Revolutionary War. Colonization of the New World by Europeans during the seventeenth century resulted in a great expansion of slavery, which later became the most common form of labor in the colonies. According to Peter Kolchin, modern Western slavery was a product of European expansion and was predominantly a system of labor. Even with the introduction of slavery to the New World, life still wasn’t as smooth as we may presume. Although the early American colonists found it perfectly fine to enslave an entire race of people, they
Farmers in the south needed people to manage their economy on the farms. They used it in the form of slaves. Slaves were easy to purchase at low prices. They were used by their “masters” with long days of work, bad clothes and shoes, poor housing, and fear of being wiped or killed with no repercussions (Brogan 282). During the American Revolution, both the South and North used the labor force of slaves that were coming from Africa and the Caribbean. However the north quickly outlawed slavery. In fact, the last state in the north to end the idea of slave usage was New Jersey in 1804 (Brogan 280). This was due to a flow of immigrants from Ireland and Germany that were prepared to work for very low wages (Causes of the Civil War).
The African slavery guide to American by Europeans, more over the Virginia had the first slavery. In 18th century slavery was so important for the southern colonies, there were some slavery in northern colonies but was not so important. The Southern Colonies was based on a system of large-scale farming that depended on the labor of slaves to grow certain crops, especially cotton and tobacco.
The controversies surrounding slavery have been established in many societies worldwide for centuries. In past generations, although slavery did exists and was tolerated, it was certainly very questionable,” ethically“. Today, the morality of such an act would not only be unimaginable, but would also be morally wrong. As things change over the course of history we seek to not only explain why things happen, but as well to understand why they do. For this reason, we will look further into how slavery has evolved throughout History in American society, as well as the impacts that it has had.