Battles have been fought since the dawn of time. Weapons have gradually become more technological and sophisticated each and every time. People learn from their mistakes, as did the Indians in the late 1700s, as well as the Confederate troops from the Civil War. The Union was victorious in this war for freedom, and to this day, the north is more the heart of the country's economy.…
The African, female slaves, were basically brought to the colonies as an investment to the plantation owner. They were able to work like the men in the fields, and most significantly could reproduce more native-born slaves, which meant more property for the slave owner. They were only fit to marry with other slaves secretively, because marriage between slaves was not accepted by the colonies. Female slaves that didn't farm the land next to their male counterparts were in the homes with the upper class women. They cared for the children of the household, cleaned, cooked and helped in any way necessary. Working indoors was not surely better than working outside. In the fields, groups working together were not always watched by their masters, but being in the house meant continuous supervision and higher risk of sexual abuse. Constant physical labor like doing the laundry, carrying water and routine chores such as clearing chamber pots and making beds was expected day to day. They were also on call of their masters and master's wives 24 hours a day. The slave women that worked in the fields during the day, also had to prepare dinner for their families after the long day of work. Normally they would not even get a day off during the week, so they would have to fake illness, or labor to…
Indentured servitude, for example, was a common occurrence. People would enter into contracts with the head of a family, some to pay off passage to the colonies, others for different reasons, and would work either as a house servant or as an agricultural servant. Those in such positions were dependant on and at the mercy of their master, who could treat them like property. “Most colonial servants,” Wood states, “could be bought or sold, rented out, seized for the debts of their masters, and conveyed in wills to heirs… [servants] could not marry, buy or sell property, or leave their households without their master’s permission” (53). Additionally, some households had slaves, who legally had no rights and were completely dependant on their masters. In fact, so many people were in some form of servitude or another that “at any one moment, as much as one-half of the colonial society was legally unfree” (Wood,…
As had been true in the eighteenth century, families remained essential to African American culture. Although no southern state recognized slave marriages in law, masters encouraged marriage among their slaves, believing it made the men less rebellious, and they were eager for the slave women to have children. This created an opportunity for the slaves to express their love and intimacy through the adversity. Whatever marriages meant to the masters, to slaves they were a haven of love in a cruel world and the basis of the African American community. Differing from the marriage relationships between whites, the slaves had a more equal relationship between the husband and wife, with neither being more dependent or submissive. Marriage also meant continuity to the slaves. The parents made great efforts to teach their children family history and to surround them with a supportive and protective kinship network. Because of the movement and vast size of the internal slave trade, where many slaves inside of the states were being sold off to other…
Slaves in the Antebellum South had many restrictions placed on them, including on their marriage. According to Tera W. Hunter, New York Times author, “Back in 1860, marriage was a civil right and a legal contract, available only to free people. Male slaves had no paternal rights and female slaves were recognized as mothers only to the extent that their status doomed their children’s fate to servitude in perpetuity” (Hunter). Slaves were forced to live under the terms of their master that controlled their relationship. Despite this, many slave families held high family values and often worked hard as a result of their master allowing them to have a family.…
Around 1790, there were 700,000 slaves in the United States. And by 1860, the number of slaves moved up to 4 million (lecture). The reason why the numbers had changed so drastically was because of the cotton boom. The cotton growing was concentrated on plantations rather than the small farms. Around 75% of slaves lived in groups of around 10 or more slaves, which made changes in the African American slave communities and culture (lecture). With the slave communities developing, they were very unstable. Around 1 million slaves migrated from the upper to lower south, which split the communities and families apart. Since the slave communities were growing, Southern African American communities were different from other slave groups such as Cuba where they constantly imported slaves from Africa. With being a slave, it resulted in a lot of health challenges but the planters tried to keep them healthy enough to work. The death rate for the slave children were rather high because the women worked hard and were not nourished enough. Their masters provided them with food and supplemented the food by growing and hunting (lecture). The slave children did not work the fields at the start of their lives. They were to observe how to survive as slaves. They learned what the penalties were for disobedience and observed how white men violated black women. They saw how slaves were sold away for punishment and also for profit. The older children were to take care of the younger ones and there was no schools for the slave kids. Adult slaves served as servants, artisans, skilled workers, or most were field workers. Most of the skilled workers were men rather than women. Around 75% worked in the field directly affected by the cotton plantation labor system (lecture). With the cotton, it demanded a year rounds worth of labor. The owners divided the slaves up into 20-25 slaves. At harvest they would work 18-hour days. In the evening the women would…
Visions of America says sometimes African American slaves who were married would have different masters and live on different plantations. After a couple was married, they were not allowed to move to one plantation and live together. Each slave remained on their own plantation. Sometimes they were allowed to visit each other, but that required getting permission from the masters. Since the couple’s children lived with their mother, the father might only see his family once a week.…
Does Betheny’s marriage feel like a real marriage? What challenges did she and Jerry face in attempting to live like a married couple?…
As early as the 1700’s, many slaves were captured to work on the white man’s plantation. For this purpose cotton and tobacco took center stage as they became the cash crops. Poverty stricken with no way out, slaves became frustrated, alienated, and violated, which caused most of them to become rebellious and runaway. However, when runaways were apprehended, flogging was the mere punishment, and death was the severity. Chores on the plantation consisted of cooks, workers in the fields, and mainly women working in the Master’s homes. Normalcy became a constant reminder of family members being sold or separated. Under these conditions, slaves…
In hopes of acquiring deserved freedom, slaves had the right to kill their masters. But while justified, violence was futile, leading to execution rather than freedom.…
During the time of the 1900’s, we have seen the disgusting ways African Americans were treated. We have seen the selling, leasing, and physically punishing someone. There was torment that a human being had to go through because they were taken away from their homeland and were considered “slaves”. Now you would probably think that between enslaved men and women that enslaved women would have less suffering to go through. Completely false. Women were given the hardest workload and the hardest time during enslavement. Enslaved women went through so much more pain and hardship than anybody can ever imagine. The road to freedom was more gruesome and intense for a enslaved women that it would ever be for an enslaved man.…
Slaves were largely treated as property, to be freely bought and sold. They worked on plantations in many jobs like work in the field and collect the plants, Clean the slave owner’s house, cook for the white people, and many of different. Some slave owners allowed their slaves to marry; others imposed marriages on them. The owner was free to split up a couple or family at any time simply by selling some of his/her slaves. Slave children were sent into the fields at about 12 years of age where they worked from sun up to sundown. Almost all the jobs if not done right would cause for punishment for no reason sometimes. Field work was the hardest and most punishable work. They usually gave the hard work which is the field work of the darkest slaves while the lighter skinned slaves had better jobs and overall life. In many situations, women had to do the same men, carrying extremely heavy loads and using large iron tools. Masters had no concern for the slaves’ survival, that pregnant women were still expected to continue to work their job until their child is born. In plantations there is a cook house where the slaves make their owners food. The slaves ate a little bit of food that was good and not cooked sometimes and people will steal to get extra food. If the owners finish eating the slaves can eat what they left and even though it is nasty, they were grateful for the food they got for…
Christina Snyder presents to readers an incredibly articulated diagram of the deep rooted history of slavery and the role Native Americans played in it. Snyder’s discussion is centralized around the economic and culture ties slavery participated to in Native American life before and after European introduction into North America. A vial part in understanding the role of slavery to the natives is being able to distinguish why there was a need for slavery to be implemented and to understand how the slaves would be integrated into the societies of the natives.1 From this discussion Snyder explains how a need for slave labor preexisted the integration of Europeans into the Natives society, but there inclusion ultimately altered the way slavery…
By the eighteenth century, “slavery became more entrenched” (Foner, 135) in North America. In all regions, people depended on slavery in order to make an income and put food on the table. Although New England and other middle colonies did not condone plantation slavery, the colonies still made profit from African slaves by shipping them to areas such as South Carolina, Georgia, and the Caribbean, or by using slaves for other types of labor. These colonies gave slaves (usually personal servants or artisan shop workers) some rights that no slave ever experienced in southern colonies: marriage, letting family inherit land, and testifying against whites. In South Carolina, slaves were either responsible for farming on rice and indigo plantations,…
The Dehumanization of the Enslave: Frederick Douglass The Narrative of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written by Himself…