Historical sources on slavery

In 1619, Dutch traders sold twenty Africans to English settlers for the purposes of slave labor. By the late seventeenth century, enslaved Africans would become the primary source of labor in America, especially in the South. While the North relied more on technology after the Industrial Revolution, the Southern economy was based on agriculture. Despite the aversion of many Northerners to slavery after the American Revolution, the demand for cotton and tobacco in the North kept slavery, on which the antebellum Southern economy was based, alive. In this book, students will read accounts about the lives of those enslaved laborers. Through primary sources, students will also learn about the laws designed to protect the institution of slavery and how the institution was dismantled.

Cavendish Square
2020
9781502640871
book

Holdings

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230011958423692155781786914257EIEH160EIEH37261306.362 SEB306.3616179818691708963493
283931463218832133781786914257HOS269HOS0042463952 SEB95216377825731695044385
350076468713712152781786914257BRMI115BRMS53517306.3 SEB306.316427897121708963493