π Slavery is not just a southern institution, but an American institution.
π The early history of America indicates that freedom and slavery coexisted, questioning if it always had to be that way.
π± The Jamestown Colony in Virginia initially aimed for a utopian society, but was met with challenges and relied on African servants for labor.
Anthony Johnson, an African man, arrived in Virginia and became a free landowner.
The laws in Virginia began to shift, defining slavery based on race and perpetuating it through heredity.
Unrest and rebellions among indentured servants led to the attractiveness of racial slavery to Southern slaveholders.
π The transition from indentured servitude to racial slavery in America happened gradually, with the addition of laws over time.
π₯ Anthony Johnson, a successful African landowner, faced challenges to his family's freedom as racial slavery became more entrenched.
π The African slave trade became increasingly profitable for England, leading to a significant increase in the number of enslaved Africans transported to the American colonies.
π Millions of Africans were kidnapped and sold into slavery, leading to the destruction of communities and the displacement of many people in West Africa.
π European exploration and colonization of West Africa led to the establishment of forts and castles used for the slave trade.
βοΈ The transatlantic slave trade involved the capture and transportation of millions of Africans to the Americas as slaves.
π’ The Middle Passage was a brutal journey from Africa to the Americas, characterized by inhumane conditions and high mortality rates.
Slaves were prevented from dying voluntarily to set an example of submission.
The slave trade involved the dehumanization of enslaved Africans for profit.
Rice cultivation in Carolina brought immense wealth to plantation owners.
Africans in Carolina formed their own communities and resisted the control of slaveholders.
The increasing numbers of Africans in the colony led to rising white fear and retaliation.
π The system of control in slavery was based on physical punishment and making examples out of people.
π Europeans in America faced hostility from the enslaved population living amongst them.
π₯ The Stono Rebellion in South Carolina marked the beginning of stricter control and legislation on the enslaved population.
π Slave owners in New York City had suspicions of enslaved blacks plotting and conspiring against them, leading to ordinances restricting their activities and gatherings.
π New York City was a cosmopolitan place with diverse ethnic groups, including seamen and black residents. Black men were known to gather and mingle with white residents in taverns, leading to concerns among the authorities and white population.
π₯ In 1741, a series of fires in New York City sparked suspicions of a slave rebellion. The English authorities feared that enslaved blacks had received promises of freedom from Spain and accused them of conspiring to destroy the city.
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