Slavery pattern in North America took a funny trend since initially the blacks had some social positions and had a voice in the running of the community. This however later changed and the North also started to own slaves at a higher rate. There are several factors that led to this change in events in the north that made it to fancy slavery just as much as the South was with its plantations.
It is worth noting the background of the slavery trend in order to fully comprehend the drastic shift in slavery from the class servitude to racial slavery which was predominantly in the late 17th century and early 18th century. The black laborers and white laborers from the working class used to work on the same level and the Europeans used to be allowed to have slaves from the non-Christians population regardless of the color. The class determined the servitude. Any servant who broke his contract terms was punished regardless of the race. At the end of the slavery time, they used to be give freedom dues and let go. States like Virginia had such policies implemented very strictly in the 1625s leading to 1670s. It was during the 1670 that the trend began to change against the black slaves.
The freed slaves had the right to get some piece of land as a freedom token. The tricky part with this was that as more and more slaves were released, the pressure on the land grew and they ultimately posed a danger to the land that belonged to the elite white settlers. Conflict started to brew between the slaves and to some extent burned down properties. Majority of the freed white slaves or servants moved on to settle in other areas while the black population remained behind predominantly and became competitors to the elite European masters. The other factor that was of concern to the white elites was the expensive cost of finding replacement for the freed slaves.
On the backdrop of these conditions, Massachusetts passed a law legalizing slavery in 1641 a move that was followed by other states like Virginia in 1662 and several other states of North America. This was the turning point of the slavery trend. Virginia decided that by law any child born to a slave would be a slave. Slavery was not only now a life long condition but a quality that was passed down from parent to child, like the skin color.
To further enslave the blacks, Virginia passed a rule in 1705 that all servants who were imparted to the state and were originally not Christians in their original country were to be slaves. This then covered the Indians and the mulatto on top of the Africans (PBS Online, 2012).
This marked the beginning of the 'terrible transformation' as the suppliers of the slaves in England responded by heightening their supply. There was increase in demand due to the economic reasons and now that it had been legalized everyone wanted to have slaves. This also marked a terrible development as English legalized the slave trade. From the early 1700s to 1750s, the number of slaves brought to America shot up from the annual 5,000 to 45,000 slaves annually. Thereafter the economy became the new determining factor in the slave ownership. Both the North and the South argued on a business rationale to slave ownership. The thriving plantations of the South needed cheap labor and the booming industries of the North also required labor and they both found it cheaply from slaves whom they bought just once. This perpetuated the triangular slave trade between Africa, North America and Europe.
2. Evaluate the main forms that slave resistance took, analyze the historical forces behind this resistance, and explain its main effects.
Slaves were subjected to inhuman conditions right from their capture in Africa and transfer of them through the unfavorable weather conditions and squalid onboard the ships conditions that saw many of them die. This mistreatment was met with resistance at all the levels, right from the transportation stage to the working period in the farms and industries after being sold.
The resistances that were seen aboard the slave ships came in various forms. One of the common methods was open violence to the slavers, killing or maiming them then taking control of the ship to the closest destination they could see. The other form of resistance was a passive resistance that was conducted by going on hunger strikes. Indeed some starved themselves to death as indicated by James H....
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