Slavery and its Relation to the Modern World
The history of slavery in colonial America is a story of two worlds: the world of the aristocratic landowners and the slaves from African that helped to maintain and work the plantations. Each group had its own experiences and views, and each group was impacted differently by slavery. At the time, slavery was an accepted practice in the South. It had first been introduced in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619 when 20 slaves from Africa were brought to the colony by a Dutch ship. Thus began an era of slavery in America that had lasting effects on the population of the country even unto this very day. This paper will show how slavery throughout the history of the United States influenced the Legacy of slavery today because slavery is discussed in a negative connotation.
As the Editors of History.com note, “though it is impossible to give accurate figures, some historians have estimated that 6 to 7 million black slaves were imported to the New World during the 18th century alone.” This was an immense number of people that were forced to move from one continent and culture to another. It had a tremendous psychological, social, economical and political impact on American culture. White plantation owners used the slaves for harvesting tobacco initially; some of them could be quite cruel, as the letter from Lucius published in the Virginia Gazette in 1773 showed by describing “the Practices of a cruel and savage Master” in hopes of bringing to light how inhumane some Masters could treat their slaves (Costa). Though the practice of slavery continued on, it did change in form over time—mainly because the industry changed: with the invention of the cotton gin, the South switched to growing cotton and became huge cotton exporters. To manage the cotton industry, they needed slaves—free labor—which allowed them to rake in the profits with big margins (Editors of History.com). By using slaves to make themselves part of the elite class, the southern plantation owners were able to benefit from slave labor and become rich and wealthy and powerful. This led to their belief that they could survive on their own apart from the Union, which is essentially what led to the Civil War, the bloodiest conflict on American soil in the nation’s history.
Yet, for African slaves, they...
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