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The Economics of Slavery

Page history last edited by Mr. Hengsterman 9 years, 7 months ago

JOURNAL #2 
9/15/2014

 

Part I  The Economics of Slavery

 

Greatest asset in British colonial America   

Greatest asset in British colonial America  =  the immensity of land

 

Greatest deficit in British colonial America

 
  shortage of hands to develop land 

 

 

The British government showed little interest in sponsoring emigration Those who did emigrate were often the least prepared or the most anti-social (for religious or other reasons).   Colonists already in America paid for  the importation of convicts, beggars, prisoners-of-war, and indentured servants 

 

The colonists turned to an existing trade in forced labor  in the form of slaves carried by Spanish, Portuguese , and Dutch traders. The Colonies developed their own domestic slave trading  industry , based on the Middle Passage centered in Newport, Rhode Island

 

Slavery and the Making of America "The Capture

 

The Economics of Slavery

#1  An attractive option for labor starved colonists

 

 

#2 Permanent – it could be passed on generationally “Social death” at birth eliminated a slaves political life

 

 

#3 Slavery becomes race based, because racial coloring offered an easy basis for marking the enslaved apart from the English and

Indians

 

 

#4 All told 11 million Africans were torn from their homes “African Diaspora”

 

 

#5  Most of them were shipped to the West Indes and South America, but a sizable portion went to the North American colonies

 

 

 

 

ALL the colonies participated is slavery, but the concentrations varied. The greatest concentration of slave labor was in the Carolinas Slave labor participated in almost every aspect of the colonial economy.  Slavery generated conflict and treason, resulting in slave revolts

 

Part II The Geography of Slavery

 

The Geography of Slavery - The Middle Passage

 

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