Title: Slavery in America
1Slavery in America
- From Colonial America
- to Antebellum U.S.
2Earlier Forms of Slavery
- Slavery existed in many places and forms
throughout human history Greeks, Romans, Slavs,
Muslims, Africans, Europeans - Differed from place to place, time to time
- Majority of slaves before Atlantic Slave Trade
- Slaves captured in wars (POWs)
- Payment for debts (could sell self into slavery)
- Usually temporary situation, at least
generationally (status of slave not inherited
from parents) - Ways of gaining status for some slaves (some
social mobility) - African slavery existed before Atlantic Slave
Trade - POWs, agricultural work, some soldiers, some
gained high status - Most were of low status or debtors
- Could marry non-slaves, children were free
3Environmental And Geographical Variety of Africa
4Spread of Islam in Africa up to Middle Ages
5Trade Across the Sahara
- Trade brought west African societies into contact
with Berbers, Arabs, other African tribes - The importance of camels necessary to cross
desert - Huge camel caravans to west Africa
- West African rulers and kingdoms converted to
Islam used Islamic law, institutions, and
writing - Link to Trade and Spread of Islam in Africa (Art)
6Islam Slave Trade
- Muslim demand for slaves of all races not
religious, for political power and wealth - Variety of uses for African slaves for
household, military, and labor - Different than Atlantic slave trade which was
racially- and plantation-based - Slave caravans from west Africa across Sahara
- Muslims also traded in slaves from east Africa
coastal ports on Red Sea and Indian Ocean carried
slaves from African interior
7Empires of Medieval Africa
8West African Kingdoms Ghana
- Ghana land of gold
- Strong kingdom before Islam
- Controlled trade of gold salt
- Berber traders converted elite to Islam
- Then Berbers adopted militant form of Islam
followers were called Almoravids - Conquered Spain, converted Ghanaians
- Art of the Almoravid Period
- Trans-Saharan Gold Trade
9West African Kingdoms Mali
- Mali (1200-1450 CE)
- Mandinke People
- Successor to state of Ghana
- Upper Niger River
- Good agriculture lots of rainfall
- Strong Rulers Sundiata, Mansa Uli,
- Mansa Musa
- MM Pilgrimage to Mecca 1324 CE
- Very rich powerful visited
- kings of other nations
- Timbuktu became center of
- learning culture (p. 134)
Mosque in Djenne (Mali)
10Empire of Mali (1200-1450 CE)
11Ife West African Bronzes
- 12th-15th-century CE
- Symbols of power and religion
- Connection with spirit world
- Power of kings
- To reach spirits
- Over people
- Link to images
- Link to videos
12Effects of trade on West Africa
- Connections to other cultures
- Spread of Islam
- Slave trade
- Growth of African merchant class and cities
- Consolidation of kingdoms to control trade
- Power used to control trade and people enslaved
non-Muslims and unprotected - Example, Ife bronzes show kings AND captives
13European Exploration Labor Systems
- Colonization Empires based on exploitation of
native and African populations - Spanish system encomienda labor system mining
and agriculture by natives (slaves/serfs) - Portuguese, French, and English enslavement of
Africans - Creation of plantations in Caribbean, No. and So.
Americas to grow staple crops sugar, coffee,
tobacco, cotton - Racial system of slavery eventually developed
Europeans rationalized only blacks could be
slaves
14Slave trade transported slaves throughout
Atlantic World majority of slaves outside U.S.
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16Atlantic Slave Trade
- Europeans tapped into existing slave trade in
Africa - Atlantic slave trade increased demand for slaves
exponentially - Atlantic demand dramatically intensified and
expanded slave trade within Africa - Slave trade greatly affected African societies
- Increase power of kings and elites
- Created new trader elite on coast multilingual,
multi-ethnic, married Europeans, mixed-race
children - Affected political boundaries and states
- Led to increased warfare and slave raids,
conducted with Euro. guns - Created thousands of refugees
- Created African dependence on foreign goods,
preventing indigenous economic development still
seen today
17Slavery and Industry
- Often people think of slavery and
industrialization as two separate processes - But there are major links and connections
- Time periods
- Goods
- Methods of production
- Machinery
- Methods of labor control
- Emphases on efficiency and productivity
- European middle classes involved in both
merchants, bankers, shipping, plantation owners - Slavery and industrialization connected in major
ways reinforced each other, affected the
development of each other
18Slave Captives
- Slaves were usually captured by African slave
raiders - In early years of Atlantic trade, kings or
traders sold slaves that were on hand - As trade deepened and expanded, demand for slaves
increased, and raiders had to go further into the
interior for supplies of slaves - Usually went up one of the major rivers in canoes
- Raided villages
- Link to clip of slave capture from the film
Amistad - Raiders took slaves to coastal forts or factories
run by Africans or mixed-race trading families - Slaves were usually kept in pens on the beach
- Many slaves died en route to forts and on beaches
before ever setting sail for the Americas
19African Slave Factory on African Coast
20West African Slave Fort or Factory
21Tools of the African Slave Trade
22Slave Fort and Boats
23Slave Fort, Ghana, 1973
24Slave Ship
Middle Passage efficient and controlled
transportation of goods AND murderous
enslavement and exploitation of fellow humans
25Below-decks of Slave Ship, 1845
26Atlantic Slave Trade, 1701-1810
27Cuban Sugar Mill
Slavery and Industry use of new technologies,
machinery, labor control for more efficient
production of consumer goods
28Sugar Plantation
29Sugar Mill
30The Merchant Ship Industrial?
- A factory at sea
- Discipline
- Control
- Hierarchy
- Economic profit
- Engaged in Atlantic trade
31Consumption, Production, Finance
- Relationships between new forms of industry and
new forms of consumption - New forms of popular consumption fueled and
reinforced the development of industrial
production slave and free - New forms of banking, finance, insurance to fund
and secure Atlantic trade - Examples sugar plantations, rum, coffee, tea,
tobacco, cotton - Conclusion most inhabitants of the Atlantic
world were connected to slave systems in some way
not equal ways, of course
32 The Coffee Housemeeting place, banking,
dealing, consumption
33New Forms of Consumption
- Cheap sugar, textiles, guns, rum
- Not just for royalty anymore
- Growing middle-class conspicuous consumption
- Cakes, sugary treats, for example
- But also working-class consumption
- Coffee houses places to talk politics
- Sugar cheap calories for factory workers
- Cheap goods for Atlantic Trade
- New consumption patterns tightened relationships,
both positive and negative
34North American Slavery
- Distinctions
- General differences between North American and
Caribbean/South American slavery - Differences by size of plantation
- By region northern slavery, upper vs. lower
south, western slavery - By crop tobacco, rice, sugar, coffee, cotton
- Changes over time (for example, after Am.
Revolution after end of Atlantic slave trade
after LA Purchase) - Link to clip on slavery in the Carolinas (from
the PBS series, Slavery and the Making of America
(2005)
35Slaves in the Original Thirteen Colonies
(1750-1860)
36Slaves as Percentage of Southern Population
(1750-1860)
37Slaves as Percentage of Southern Population
(1750-1860
38Pirates
- What do pirates represent?
Link to National Geographic article
on Blackbeards ship, recent archaeological work
on the underwater wreck
Blackbeard the Pirate
39Blackbeard and North Carolina
- Blackbeard hijacked French slave ship La Concorde
off Caribbean island of Martinique set slaves
free - Ship had been used for at least 3 slaving
voyages, around 500 slaves each - 61 died on Middle Passage on last voyage
- 16 crew members also died
- Blackbeard plundered ships in triangle and
Atlantic/Caribbean trade
40Atlantic Resistance to Power?
- At their most radical
- Pirates represented rare form of interracial
lower-class solidarity - Whites, blacks, and people from all over the
Atlantic fought Atlantic industrial and slave
systems together - But.white resistance to power, authority, and
exploitation usually took other forms - Problem of racism - usually divided white
working-class from slaves and free blacks in
Atlantic world - White workers defined themselves as not slaves
- Whites gained prestige, small level of comfort
consumption, wages for not being slaves
41Popular Resistance
- There were a variety of popular responses by
people around the Atlantic in times of economic
change - During feudalism (peasants vs. lords)
- Reused during transition to industrial economy
- Used to attack or undermine authority of masters
(of different kinds slave masters, industrial
owners, middle class)
42Mumming and Masquerade
Mumming was tradition of masquerade in feudal and
modern Europe Usually around harvest or
Xmas time A night when it was ok to challenge
lords or masters authority Lord or
master expected to share wealth or abun-dance,
the treat
Mummers showing up at the masters door
43Luddites in England
Luddites reused tradition of popular local
protest and masquerade to protest new industrial
system Luddites smashed new industrial factories
and machines to protest control and power of new
industrial system Often worked at night, in
masks, costumes, under cover of darkness Signed
protest letters as Ned Ludd
44Modern Mumming in Philly
Modern Mummers Day Parade in Philadelphia every
New Years Day
45History of Public Resistance and Performance
- Context of owner surveillance and control
attempts to limit gatherings in groups, fear of
slave revolt - Slaves, free blacks, post-slavery black Americans
cele-brated Emancipation Day as reminder of
continued fight for racial, social, and economic
equality - Claiming public sites or spaces when they did not
have any formal power or rights - Examples
- John Canoe or Jonkonnu
- Pinkster and Negro Election Day
- Public religious, political, musical expression
- Often poked fun at whites through dress and
mimicry
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48Everyday acts of resistance What are they
talking about?
49Slavery in Age of Revolution
- Revolutionary and Enlightenment beliefs had great
impact on slaves and slavery - Ideas of liberty, freedom, equality, natural
rights circulated throughout the Atlantic world - Adam Smith free labor and markets are best
- Lord Dunmoore slaves would be freed if they
fought for Brits during Am. Revolution - Some upper south owners freed slaves after Am.
Revolution - Northwest Ordinance, 1787 slavery banned from
NW territory - Gradual Emancipation in northern states in late
18th- and early 19th centuries
50Frederick Douglass and the Slave Experience
- In what ways did Douglass resist the power of
slaveholders and slave society?
51Resistance Atlantic Abolitionists
- Britain developed strong abolitionist movement
- Quakers in 18th and 19th centuries
- William Wilberforce and reformers in Parliament
British slave trade abolished, 1807 - Abolition of slavery in colonies, 1830s
- Strong working-class support for abolition,
despite fears of textile unemployment - British if they could abolish slavery, then it
was right thing for U.S. to do - Advocated free trade and free labor instead
of slave labor - Critics of free labor said it wasnt truly free
either
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53Close-up of Painting
Comments?
54Possible Student Selection
Student Comments
55Abolition Common White Fears
- For most whites, abolition was scary
- It raised questions and fears about ex-slaves
- Are blacks capable of being free?
- Can they live peacefully with whites?
- Will they work if not forced to? assumed they
were naturally lazy - Will they work for wages?
- Will they assimilate into society?
- Fears of sexual relations with whites racial
mixture
56French and Haitian Revolutions
- Circulation of revolutionary ideals throughout
Atlantic - Impact of French Rev. on slaves in Haiti and
other Atlantic slave societies - Haitian Revolution, 1791-1804 only successful
slave revolt - Haitian Revolt and Republic inspired slaves
throughout Atlantic - Struck fear in whites worst possible outcome in
white minds
57Effects of Issues of Slavery and Wage Labor in
the Atlantic World?
58Zombies!
- What is a zombie?
- Dead, but alive
- Disguise of zombie
- Group of zombies mass conformity
- Mindless, speechless
- Created by some kind of disaster
- Consciousness being conscious vs. loss of
control
59Zombies Atlantic Radicals?
- Product of Atlantic economic, social, and
cultural history and connections - Loosely based on West African and Haitian vodun
(voodoo) religious practices, combined with
Christian and other influences - Africa Caribbean Britain U.S. World
- Stories and myths - critical of power, control,
loss of freedom - Began under slavery
- Emancipation as evolving issue new forms of
power and control wage labor, colonialism, Jim
Crow,.
60Film, White Zombie, 1932
61Fela Kuti, Zombie, 1977
- Nigerian Afrobeat musician
- Influenced by U.S.
Black Power movement - Anti-colonial activist
- Activist for Nigerian democracy, against govt.
repression
62Michael Jacksons Thriller
- What is the message of Thriller?
- How does Thriller deal with white fears?
63Image of Integration The American Dream
64Image of Integration Public Culture
65Image of Religious MysteryBlack Christianity
and Folk Traditions
66Image of Black Urban Culture Street Performance
67Major Issues that Defined Atlantic World
- Control and discipline of workers (slave and
free) - Production for profit
- Control of time
- Control of space
- Movement and trade of primary resources in
exchange for finished industrial goods - Growth of middle classes in ports and industrial
centers - Growth of working-class/slave populations
68Connections
- New forms of power, control, and profit in the
Atlantic World - Connections between slavery and industrial
capitalism - Popular forms of resistance to power and economic
exploitation - Wage labor developed within context of Atlantic
Economy and African enslavement wage workers
compared to slaves - Possibilities of cross-racial resistance
- Problems of white fears of loss of control and
power (slavery) - Emancipation movements and continuing importance
of issues of race, power, freedom in Atlantic and
world history