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Antebellum Slavery

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1773-1777: Free blacks in Massachusetts submit a series of petitions urging an end to slavery. ... Resistance. Slave songs. Religious practices. Learning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Antebellum Slavery


1
Antebellum Slavery
2
The Roots of Slavery
  • Slavery was introduced in North America from the
    Carribean.
  • First Africans arrive in 1619 in Jamestown, Va.
  • Slavery gradually develops with three defining
    characteristics
  • Racial
  • Hereditary
  • Chattel
  • By 1750, all the British North American colonies
    had legalized slavery.

3
Defining Slavery
  • 1641 Massachusetts first colony to recognize
    slavery as a legal status
  • 1663 Virginia declares that children of slave
    mothers are slaves
  • 1690 South Carolina Slave Code adopted
    modeled after Barbados Slave Code.
  • 1705 Virgina Slave Code adopted
  • defines all negro, mulatto, and Indian servants
    as property. Authorizes physical punishments
    including whipping, branding, cutting off ears,
    and mutilation.
  • 1740 South Carolina Negro Act
  • Response to the Stono Rebellion 1739
  • Prohibited slaves from learning to read or write,
    assembling, dressing in clothing other than an
    approved list.

4
Slavery During the Revolutionary Period
  • 1750 300,000 slaves in America (20 of the
    total population)
  • American Revolution begins a discussion about
    freedom the role of slavery in the United
    States
  • Following the Revolution, many northern states
    began abolishing slavery
  • 1787 Northwest Ordinance bars slavery in the NW
    Territory

5
  • 1776 Declaration of Independence drafted
    includes a condemnation of the slave trade.
  • References to the slave trade are removed at the
    request of southern delegates.

6
  • 1773-1777 Free blacks in Massachusetts submit
    a series of petitions urging an end to slavery.
  • they havewith all other men, a natural and
    unalienable right of freedom

7
  • 1777-1783 Over 5,000 African-American men serve
    in the Continental Army and Navy
  • Many receive their freedom in reward for their
    service.
  • By 1790, there will be 60,000 free blacks in the
    US
  • 250,000 by 1860
  • List of casualties from
  • Lexington Concord

8
Slavery and the US Constitution
  • 1787 Constitutional Convention
  • A new, more powerful govt
  • Southerners demand protections for slavery
  • Protections for slavery in the new Constitution
  • No interference with the slave trade for 20
    years
  • Fugitive slave law
  • Govt will help put down domestic insurrections

9
19th Century Slavery
  • As America expands, slavery expands.
  • US doubles in size from 1800-1831
  • Slavery expands west into new territories in the
    South.
  • 1793 Cotton Gin

10
Population
  • US Population/
  • Slave Population
  • 1780 3.5 million / 575,000
  • 1800 5.3 million / 900,000
  • 1830 12.8 million / 2.5 million

11
Slave Life
  • Kin to kint
  • 14 hr days
  • 4 in 10 live to 60 years
  • Dehumanizing slave auctions
  • Info WPA Slave Narratives

12
Resistance to Slavery
  • Running away
  • 76 under 35 89 are men
  • Underground Railroad
  • Organized in the early 1800s
  • By 1850, an estimated 50,000-100,000 escape this
    way
  • Most runaways leave temporarily, hide-out, then
    are captured or return.

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14
  • Harriet Jacobs

15
  • Revolt
  • The least common form of resistance.
  • All major slave revolts in American history are
    thwarted
  • 1739 Stono Rebellion S.C.
  • 1800 Prossers Plot Va.
  • 1822 Denmark Vesey Plot S.C.
  • 1831 Nat Turners Rebellion Va.
  • 1860 John Browns Raid Va.

16
  • Sabotage
  • Feigning Illnesses
  • Work slow downs
  • Cultural Resistance
  • Slave songs
  • Religious practices
  • Learning to read / write

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