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The Economics of the Colonies: Mercantilism and Slavery

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England encouraged settlement in the American colonies to provide England more ... Slaves did resist, but not overtly, except on a few occasions. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Economics of the Colonies: Mercantilism and Slavery


1
The Economics of the Colonies Mercantilismand
Slavery
  • Colonial America

2
Mercantilism
  • This is the economic philosophy England followed
    during the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • In general, mercantilism means that a country has
    more gold coming into a country than is leaving.
    You sell (exports) more than you buy (imports).

3
Trade
  • England encouraged settlement in the American
    colonies to provide England more markets to sell
    their goods in.
  • England placed strict trade laws on the colonies
    to ensure that the mother country, not the colony
    itself, would always be the beneficiary therefore
    keeping the balance of trade favorable.
  • Generally, the colonies had to buy all
    manufactured goods from England and sell England
    all their raw materials.
  • Salutary Neglect- It will not be until 1763 that
    England will try to enforce these laws. The
    colonies benefited from this neglect.

4
Triangular Trade
  • The colonists evaded many of the navigation laws
    and partook in the triangular trade.
  • The triangular trade is how the colonists
    purchased their slaves.
  • The trade involved the colonies, Africa, and the
    West Indies sugar islands

5
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6
Slavery Origins in America
  • The first Africans arrived to Virginia in 1619 as
    indentured servants.
  • It was not until 1700 that slaves became the
    majority of the southern labor force.

7
The Middle Passage
  • This was the leg from Africa to the West Indies.
  • Millions died due to lack of water, air, and
    sickness.

8
Slave Laws
  • It was not until the slave population grew large
    that colonies, especially the southern colonies,
    began to develop harsh slave codes/laws.
  • By the eighteenth-century in America, it was
    clear that slavery was racial slaveblack.

9
North vs. South
  • North
  • Labor in the North was relatively easier as far
    as physical exertion
  • Mostly domestic, not agricultural labor
  • Slaves had little access to their African culture
  • South
  • Labor was physical and arduous
  • Often lived in large kin groups were they could
    maintain much of their African culture and
    develop families

10
Slave Resistance
  • Slaves did resist, but not overtly, except on a
    few occasions.
  • Understanding violence would be met with violence
    or death, they dragged their feet, feigned
    sickness, or pretended they did not know how to
    do a task correctly.
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