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Plantation Slavery In The 19th Century

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But plantation slavery did not function simply because of threats or violence. Slaves were also wheedled and persuaded to work. They were given small motivations -extra foods, clothing, and time free from work, expecting that they would work more and effectively. They were also given land to cultivate foodstuffs or rear animals for their own use. Among all these, yet violence was the eventual threat of the entire system, much as it had been on the slave ship.
Plantation reminded a specifically Southern and rural image in which slavery was well hidden within tranquil botanical scene. And yet, from the very beginning of industrialization in the ‘North’, plantation agriculture and enslavement were methodically embedded in the tracks of Northern capital and urbanization. Plantation was not an early establishment in the nineteenth century, but …show more content…

They could be moved from one property to another. An owner, without giving notice, sell them to someone else, or they might be sold when a planter died .Moreover, they might be moved simply because the owner had bestowed them as part of his property to his children. Slaves found themselves removed, in an instant to a distant, unknown location, leaving behind family, kith and kin and community. This was perhaps one of the most resentfully features of plantation life right across all plantation colonies.
No less common and brutal was sexual exploitation. Slave women were always become prey to the greedy sexual habits of their masters. Young and old, sisters, daughters and wives – all found themselves focused issue to sexual assault. The White men responsible for those assaults took little or no notice of the woman herself, her age, or her men folk, or family. Not surprisingly, it was a cause of deep hurt and humiliation. It was also often the cause and occasion for smoldering resentment or revenge if and when the opportunity arose – in whatever fashion seemed

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