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Growth of Slavery and the Slave Trade

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Growth of Slavery and the Slave Trade Slavery in Africa, the Middle Passage, Limiting Rights Slavery in Africa Slavery existed in Africa and elsewhere around the world. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Growth of Slavery and the Slave Trade


1
Growth of Slavery and the Slave Trade
  • Slavery in Africa, the Middle Passage, Limiting
    Rights

2
Slavery in Africa
  • Slavery existed in Africa and elsewhere around
    the world.
  • Usually they were people captured in war
  • Slaves were a part of the community and often
    treated as servants rather than property.
  • Slave traders sold African slaves into Europe and
    the Middle East.
  • As the slave trade grew, Europeans promised
    traders guns and goods in exchange for slaves
    from the interior of Africa.

3
The Middle Passage
  • The passage of slave ships west across the
    Atlantic Ocean
  • Conditions on the ships were horrible
  • Slaves were chained to each other.
  • They were allowed above deck to eat and exercise
    once a day.
  • Many tried to resist by revolting, others refused
    to eat or jumped overboard to avoid slavery
  • About 10 of Africans died during the voyage by
    illness or mistreatment.

4
Detailed plan of the Brookes, 1789
Below the plan was a detailed description of the
Brookes and information about the ship's trading
history.
5
(No Transcript)
6
Limiting Rights
  • Colonists passed laws that set out rules for
    slave behavior and denied slaves basic rights.
  • Slave codes treated enslaved Africans not as
    human beings but as property
  • The colonists believed blacks were inferior to
    whites known as racism (believing one race is
    superior to another).

7
Ad for slaves
8
Primary Source- a firsthand account
Interior of a Slave Ship, a woodcut illustration
from the publication, A History of the Amistad
Captives, reveals how hundreds of slaves could be
held within a slave ship.
9
Questions
  • What time period were these pictures/excerpts
    made?
  • Who created them?
  • Why were they made?
  • Why are they important?

10
Published in the June 2, 1860 issue of Harper's
Weekly, The Slave Deck of the Bark "Wildfire"
illustrated how Africans traveled on the upper
deck of the ship.
11
Excerpt from The Interesting Narrative of the
Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, The
African
  • Besides, the crew used to watch us very closely
    who were not chained down to the decks, lest we
    should leap into the water, and I have seen some
    of these poor African prisoners most severely
    cut, for attempting to do so, and hourly whipped
    for not eating. This indeed was often the case
    with myself.
  • - Equiano, 1789
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