For women, slavery was a devastating experience, they had been taken away from their homeland, family, and subjected to physical humiliation, rape, and beaten without mercy, but still Women played an important part in playing a significant role in slave resistance in the antebellum period of the United States.
Klein says,” In Cameroon adult male salves commanded the best price in the 1790s, but from the 1860s to the 1890s twice the price was paid for women and children’’ . “Slavery is terrible for men; but it was far more terrible for women. Superadded to the burden common to …show more content…
Slave women were a subject of rape at any time, after the young girls grow up to middle childhood age they became a subject for abuse, harassment, and rape. Slave woman should not complain about it or refuse. Sometimes female slaves complied with advances hoping that such relationships would increase the chances that they or their children would be liberated by the master which did not happen and they were sold as slave. In young age the idea of being producing children for the master and for his fantasy. For example, Dr. Flint the new master for Harriet, keep following her with his words for a girl whom 15 years old and keep saying he is her master and she need to obey him in everything he wanted. Most of the time, slave owners took slaves and raped by force even raping the married women and the husband can’t protect his wife from such a violent. “A master's control over both spouses reduced the black male's potential for …show more content…
These types of documents show that slave women resisted sexual assaults, feigned illness, were insolent, participated in work slow-downs and overt rebellions, murdered their masters, performed acts of sabotage, joined maroon colonies, and fled north to freedom. Black women resisted slavery with a passion equal to Black men.8 woman's decision to resist was made consciously, with a full awareness of the political and economic ramifications involved”8.Religion was the foundation of resistance, and slave women played a crucial role through a religious sisterhood”8Young girls also ferried information about the Civil War to the barracks of the slaves. Former slave Elizabeth Russell mentioned that although she was very small during the war, she served her people as a "secret service agent."8. Darlene Clark Hine also suggested that many slave women resisted breeding through abstinence as well as abortion in order to deny their masters economic gain through their bodies, and to ensure that no more Blacks would grow up in