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The Colonial Era Of North America

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Few topics of the colonial era of North America generate as much debate as the conversion of labor in 17th century Virginia from English indentured servitude to one based primarily on African slaves. Historians have attempted to ascertain why Virginia tobacco planters determined that an economic system based on African slave labor was advantageous to the traditional servant system used up to that point, and why that change increased rapidly beginning in the 1670s. The significance of these years on American History justifies the level of historical debate and amount of scholarship written on this subject. The decision by a relatively small number of Virginia inhabitants to evolve their means of labor to one founded on forced emigration and servitude, would prove to have profound economic and social implications that have not completely been removed in today’s society, three centuries later. It ushered in a system, and an era, which will forever result in one of the darkest stains to the legacy of the United States of America. “Three conditions are necessary for the emergence of a slave society; private, concentrated landownership, sufficient development of commodity production and markets, and unavailability of an internal labor supply.” By the time the first slaves arrived in the Chesapeake in 1619, the so-called “20 and odd negroes” , tobacco was quickly becoming the dominant commodity in the emerging economy. A labor intensive crop by nature, Virginia should have been

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