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Title: African Americans


1
African Americans
2
Beginnings of slavery
  • 1441 was the start of the European slave trade in
    Africa. Portuguese captains Antao Concalves and
    Nuno Tristao capture 12 Africans in Mauritania
    and take them to Portugal.
  • De Freitas captures 225 Africans and enslaves
    them, afterwards they send them to Europe this
    was the first large group of slaves sent to
    Europe.
  • In 1452 Juan de Cordoba from Seville becomes the
    first merchant that is identified to send African
    slaves to the New World. In 1509 Columbuss son
    Diego Colon becomes governor of new Spanish
    empire in Caribbean and complains that the
    Natives dont work hard enough. This was a factor
    initiating the thought of switching to Africans
    as a alternative labor source.
  • 22 January 1510- start of systematic
    transportation of Africans to the new world. King
    Ferdinand authorized a shipment of 50 slaves to
    be sent to Santo Domingo. In 1522 there was a
    major slave rebellion on Hispaniola and after
    this rebellion slave resistance became common and
    widespread.

3
Slavery in the New World
  • 1528 a slave called Esteban becomes first slave
    to step foot on what is now united states soil.
  • Juan de la Barrera, a Seville merchant, begins
    transporting slaves directly from Africa to the
    new world instead of going to Europe first.
  • The Spanish created a system that the small
    minority of settlers controlled the lives and
    labors of millions of Indians and Africans.
  • In this society there was mixed peoples involving
    colonists, Natives, and Africans.
  • Around 125,000 Africans were forced to settle on
    the Spanish plantations on the Caribbean. Since
    European women only counted for 10 of
    immigrants. Most male colonists married with
    African women.
  • Mulatto was the term to describe the mix between
    Europeans and Africans. The mulattos became a
    majority in the population.
  • The island of Barbados was abundant in the
    production and sale of sugar but had become
    overpopulated with English settlers and Africans.
  • So in order to combat the overpopulation problem
    the majority of the Barbadians both masters and
    slaves moved to South Carolina. This diversified
    the population giving South Carolina around 6,000
    nonnative and 2500 of these peoples were enslaved
    Africans.

4
The Middle Passage
  • The Royal African Company was a slave trading
    monopoly based in London and was chartered in
    1672. In 1698 England opened the trade to
    independent merchants. Soon hundreds of ships
    started competing with London which sky rocketed
    the number of slaves in North America.
  • Most Africans were enslaved by other Africans in
    wars
  • Demand for slaves increased significantly in
    response to the plantation system because
    plantations required a lot of labor.
  • Before 1750 most slaves were sailed to
    Massachusetts but after 1750 most slaves were
    sailed to Rhode Island.
  • On the West African coast when slaves were
    waiting to be shipped off they waited in dark
    dungeons or open pens. Also to lessen the
    possibility of collective resistance the slavers
    would split up families. The Africans selected
    for transport were branded with the mark of their
    buyer.
  • A French trader wrote that many prisoners were,
    positively prepossessed with the opinion that we
    transport them into our country in order to kill
    and eat them.

5
The Middle Passage Continued
  • The middle passage was a passage through the
    middle part of a triangle from England to Africa,
    Africa to America, and America to England. There
    were two methods of shipping slaves, tight
    packing and loose packing. Loose packers believed
    that if you gave slaves more room and better
    conditions to live in there would be a lower
    fatality rate and profits would increase in turn.
    Tight packers argued that it was better to pack
    as many slaves in as possible because they may
    have more deaths but the profit for the shipment
    would be higher. Tight packing was the more
    popular method because the demand for slaves was
    so high and people needed as many slaves as
    possible.
  • Conditions in the slave ship were appalling the
    sailors were supposed to clean the hull everyday
    but the smell was so putrid that they wouldnt do
    it so the slaves would wind up lying in their own
    body wastes. Because of these horrible conditions
    many diseases were spread around among the
    slaves. Historians estimate that in the middle
    passage 1 in every 6 slaves died.
  • In 1755 Olaudah Equiano is born he was a slave
    until he bought his freedom and wrote a book
    called, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of
    Olaudah Equiano. The novel is one of the few
    African accounts of enslavement and he describes
    the cruelty slaves faced.

6
The Middle Passage Continued
  • Slaves still managed to offer plenty of
    resistance. They were most dangerous when the
    slave ships were anchored off the coast of Africa
    because they could still see the coast so they
    would be more encouraged to rise up against the
    sailors or jump overboard. As a precaution the
    crew watched the slaves intently and would also
    put netting around the ships to catch the slaves
    from jumping into the water. A historian found
    reference to 55 slave revolt on British and
    American ships from 1699 to 1845. Once the ships
    reached the open sea slaves became desperate
    because they felt as if they had no chance of
    returning to their country. Some slaves jumped
    overboard and would drown.
  • When the slaves reached land their shackles were
    taking off except for the most rebellious slaves.
    The slavers would try to make the slaves look
    better by shoving clumps of hemp fiber up the
    slaves rectum to hide the bloody discharge. Most
    slaves were bought by an auction or by a
    scramble. The scramble was when the Africans were
    paid for in advance and were put into a corral
    were at the signal the buyers would rush in and
    take their pick.

7
Anti-Slavery movements
  • Fernaode Oliveira denounces the slave trade as
    evil trade and his book inspires abolitionists
    in later years.
  • 1571- The parliament of Bordeaux sets all slaves,
    blacks and moors, free and declaring slavery
    illegal In France.
  • March 4 1681- The colony of Pennsylvania was
    founded which would later become a center of
    antislavery thought.
  • 1688- Aphra Behn publishes Oroonoko also known
    as the Royal Slave which discusses the rights and
    wrongs of slavery.
  • February 18 1688- The German Mennonite
    Resolution against slavery took place this was
    the first formal protest against slavery in a
    British American colony.
  • Slavery in the north was not as important as in
    the south because the north did not have gigantic
    plantations which required massive amounts of
    labor at most there were some small farms.
  • One major area were slavery was still
    concentrated was in Newport, Rhode Island. This
    was due to the large slave gangs used in cattle
    and dairy operations in the Narragansett country,
    some of which were as large as Virginia
    plantations.

8
Anti-Slavery Movements continued
  • The Quakers voiced the first antislavery
    sentiment in the colonies. Consideration on the
    keeping of negroes written in 1754 by John
    Woolman pointed out the Bibles declaration that
    all people were of one blood and he urged his
    readers to imagine themselves in the place of the
    African people.
  • William Wilberforce delivers the first major
    abolitionist speech before the house of commons
    on may 12, 1789.

9
Africans during the revolution
  • Atleast 5000 African Americans served in the
    continental army
  • The war in the south began with a slave uprising.
    In 1775, Lord Dunmore, the last royal governor of
    Virginia, issued a proclamation calling on slaves
    to desert their masters and take up arms with the
    British. Over 800 slaves responded to his call.
    When patriot forces efficiently routed Dunmores
    army in July 1776, they fought a large number of
    African American troops who wore sashes that
    said, Liberty to slaves. Many of these black
    soldiers succumbed to smallpox, but atleast 300
    soldiers sailed with Dunmore when he left to
    England.
  • General Clintons promise of liberty to those who
    fought in the army rallied thousands of slaves.
  • Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina began
    recruiting free persons of color and even slaves.
    In the south some slaves won their freedom
    through military service but in the lower south,
    were the numerical superiority of slaves bred
    fears of rebellion among white people, there was
    no similar movement

10
Post war for African Americans
  • For Africans there was little celebration towards
    the American victory in the revolution because it
    only perpetuated slavery. Thousands of black
    fighters departed with the British and some moved
    to the West Indies, Canada, and even Africa.
    South Carolina said to have lost around 30,000 to
    25,000 slaves due to the war.
  • Slavery was first abolished in the constitution
    of Vermont in 1777, and in Massachusetts and New
    Hampshire in 1780 and 1784. Respectively
    Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Rhode Island
    adopted emancipation by 1786. Every Northern
    state except Delaware provided immediate or
    gradual emancipation even though as late as 1810
    30,000 African Americans remained enslaved in the
    north.
  • In the upper south revolutionary idealism,
    Christian egalitarianism in Methodist and
    Baptists, and a shift from tobacco farming
    weakened the commitment of many planters to the
    slave system. There was an increase in granting
    freedom to slaves by their individual masters.
    There was also a small movement in freeing slaves
    in their owners will.

11
Post war continued
  • George Washington not only freed several hundred
    of his slaves on his death but also developed an
    elaborate plan for apprenticeship and tenancy for
    the able-bodied, lodging and pensions for the
    aged. Planters in the lower south were too
    heavily dependant on slavery and ignored the
    growing calls to end slavery. Between 1776 and
    1786 all states except South Carolina and Georgia
    heavily taxed the international slave trade.
  • From a few thousand in 1750 the free African
    American population grew to more than 200,000 by
    the end of the century. The African community now
    had sufficient strength to establish schools,
    churches, and other institutions of its own.
    Initially this development was opposed and people
    would be whipped for such ideas. But by the
    1790s the Williamsburg African Church had more
    than 500 members, and the association reluctantly
    recognized it. The incorporation of the term
    African in the names of churches, schools, and
    mutual benefit societies reflected the pride that
    African Americans now took in their heritage.

12
Influential African American people
  • Benjamin Banneker, born free in Maryland, where
    he received an education, was one of the most
    accomplished mathematicians and astronomers of
    late eighteenth century America. Other famous
    African American writers would be Jupiter Hammon
    who wrote poems and essays, one of his most
    important writing was, Address to the Negroes of
    the State of New York published in 1787. The
    most famous however was Phillis Wheatley, who
    came to public attention when her poems poems on
    various subjects, Religious and Moral appeared
    in London in 1773. her poems described her piety
    and her concern for her people

13
Famous people to know
  • Antao Goncalves-one of the captains of the
    Portuguese ship which captured 12
    Africans and shipped them back to Europe which
    started the slave trade.
  • Fernaode Oliveira- a man who denounced the slave
    trade as a evil trade and his writing inspired
    abolitionists in later years.
  • Olaudah Equiano- famous slave narrative writer
    who wrote one of the only Accounts of the
    cruelty slaves faced.
  • John Woolman- voiced the first antislavery speech
    in the colonies
  • Phillis Wheatley- the most famous African
    American writer
  • William Wilberforce-he delivered the first major
    abolitionist speech before the House of Commons

14
Important terms to know
  • Mulatto- name given to people who are mixed
    between European and African
  • Caravel- Portuguese ship which was at the time
    period it was made the best ship ever seen and
    was also used for transporting African slaves.
  • Mauritania- a country in Africa were the first
    slaves were taken by Europeans back to Europe.
  • Abolitionist- a person who wanted to end slavery
  • Barbadians- were natives to Barbados
  • Barracoons- the pens that the Africans were kept
    in before they were shipped out of Africa.
  • Maroons- runaway slaves
  • Seminoles- mixture of Africans and Creek Indian
    people
  • Middle passage- main passage used in the slave
    trade for the transportation of slaves.
  • The Scramble- method of buying slaves were the
    slaves are prepaid and the Buyers rush in at a
    signal and pick their slaves.

15
More important terms
  • Egalitarianism-belief in human equality
  • Emancipation-freeing someone from control of
    another
  • Manumissions-grants of freedom to slaves by
    individual masters
  • Abolitionist- someone who wants to get rid of
    slavery
  • Liberty- the quality or state of being free

16
multiple choice questions
  • 1. What was the term used to describe African and
    European hybrids?
  • a.) mestizos
  • b.) mulattos
  • c.) black
  • d.) French
  • 2. What American colony would become a major
    abolitionist supporter?
  • a.) North Carolina
  • b.) New England
  • c.) Pennsylvania
  • d.) South Carolina
  • 3.) The first significant slave rebellion took
    place on the island of..?
  • a.) Cuba
  • b.) Barbados
  • c.) Hispaniola
  • d.) Puerto Rico
  • 4.) What was the year the African slave trade
    started?

17
MC continued
  • 5.) What group of people voiced the first
    antislavery sentiment in the colonies?
  • a.) puritans
  • b.) Quakers
  • c.) Jews
  • d.) Catholics
  • 6.) At what point in the slave voyage were the
    slaves most dangerous?
  • a.) when in the open sea
  • b.) when exiting the ship
  • c.) when boarding the ship
  • d.) when anchored off the coast
  • 7.) Conditions in the hull for slaves were
    moderately nice and appealing.
  • a.) true
  • b.) false
  • 8.) Where in the north was slavery most
    concentrated?
  • a.) New York
  • b.) New England

18
MC Continued
  • 9. What year was the colony of Pennsylvania
    found?
  • a.) 1680
  • b.)1681
  • c.) 1640
  • d.)1670
  • 10. Who wrote the famous story oroonoko?
  • a.) John Locke
  • b.) fernaode Oliveira
  • c.) Aphra Behn
  • d.) Shakespeare
  • 11.) What did Africa contribute to the
    Intercontinental Exchange?
  • a.) gold, silver
  • b.) tobacco, cotton
  • c.) enslaved Africans
  • d.) horses, cows, pigs
  • 12.) What was the German Mennonite Resolution?

19
MC continued
  • 13.) Which European country made slavery illegal
    very early on?
  • a.) England
  • b.) Germany
  • c.) France
  • d.) Spain
  • 14.) Which European country started the slave
    trade?
  • a.) Spain
  • b.) Portugal
  • c.) Italy
  • d.) England

20
MC continued
  • 15. What term was given to runaway slaves?
  • a.) mulattos
  • b.) Mestizos
  • c.) Maroons
  • d.) Deserters
  • 16.) The Middle Passage is a route used for
    transporting slaves from Africa.
  • a.) true
  • b.) false
  • 17.) What was the most popular way that slavers
    transported their slaves?
  • a.) tight packing
  • b.) loose packing
  • 18.) Famous African author who wrote a narrative
    about his life in slavery.
  • a.) Aphra Behn
  • b.) Olaudah Equiano
  • c.) Ignatius sancho
  • d.) Shakespeare

21
MC continued
  • 19.) What percent of the colonial population to
    Africans count for after 1750?
  • a.) 11
  • b.) 40
  • c.) 20
  • d.) 15
  • 20.) Most Africans were enslaved by
  • a.) the Spanish
  • b.) the French
  • c.) other Africans
  • d.) the Portuguese
  • 21.) About how many slaves fought in the
    continental army?
  • a.) 20,000
  • b.) 5,000
  • c.) 10,000
  • d.) 1,000
  • 22.) What British general promised freedom to
    slaves who fought for him?

22
MC Continued
  • 23.) Delaware abolished its slavery along with
    all the other northern states.
  • a.) true
  • b.) false
  • 24.) Famous African author who wrote about her
    piety along with her concern for her
    people.
  • a.) Aphra Behn
  • b.) Benjamin Banneker
  • c.) Jupiter Hammon
  • d.) Phillis Wheatley
  • 25.) What was the first colony to abolish
    slavery?
  • a.) Vermont
  • b.) Massachusetts
  • c.) New Hampshire
  • d.) South Carolina
  • 26.) In what year did Massachusetts abolish
    slavery?
  • a.) 1780
  • b.) 1783

23
MC continued
  • 27.) South Carolina lost a maximum 10,000 slaves
    because of the war.
  • a.) true
  • b.) false
  • 28.) About how many Africans remained enslaved in
    the north after most states abolished
  • Slavery?
  • a.) 5,000
  • b.) 30,000
  • c.) 10,000
  • d.) 50,000
  • 29.) Which two states did not heavily tax the
    international slave trade?
  • a.) South Carolina
  • b.) Georgia
  • c.) both a and b are correct
  • d.) none of the answers are correct
  • 30.) There were about 200,000 free African
    Americans at the end of the 18th century
  • a.) true

24
References
  • Revised third edition
  • Out of many a History of the American People
  • By John Mack Faragher, Mari Jo Buhle, Daniel
    Citrom, Susan H. Armitage.
  • http//www.brycchancarey.com/slavery/index.htm
  • By Brycchan Carey
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