preview

Trans-Atlantic Interactions From 1600 To 1763

Satisfactory Essays

Unit 1 Long Essay Question
From 1600 to 1763, British North America established trans-Atlantic interactions with Europe and Africa. British North America traded goods with Europeans and Africans in exchange for other goods and people. The trans-Atlantic interactions from 1600 to 1763 contributed greatly to fostering change in labor systems, through slave trade and the decrease in transportation of indentured servants, while still somewhat maintaining continuity in labor systems, through a continued sense of superiority in settlers and harsh treatment of slaves and indentured servants.
Trans-Atlantic interactions from 1600 to 1763 fostered change in labor systems through an increase in slave trade. When settlers realized that harvesting crops and doing other chores went by much faster with slaves, there was a dramatic increase in slave labor in British North America. In the 1700s, the triangle trade was established, greatly increasing the number of African slaves shipped to British North America. In the Triangle Trade, British North Americans shipped out goods to the West Indies and Britain in return for slaves and other resources. While trans-Atlantic …show more content…

When the British first arrived in North America, they attempted to enslave the Indians already on the land. While that did not last long, it showed that they felt a sense of superiority to the Indians. They must have in order to enslave people who were on the land long before them. This sense of superiority continued in the 1600s and 1700s with African slave labor. While Africans still considered human from 1600 to 1763, British North Americans still believed they were better than African slaves and even indentured servants. While trans-Atlantic interaction maintained continuity in British sense of superiority, it also fostered change in other labor

Get Access