[Femi Lewis]
About.com African-American History Guide Femi Lewis sends us this article by former Guide Lisa Vox:
The Arrival of the First Slaves
Historians normally date the start of slavery in the North American colonies to 1619. That year, a Dutch
ship carrying African slaves docked at Point Comfort, which served as
Jamestown's checkpoint for ships wanting to trade with the colonists. The crew of the Dutch ship was starving, and as John Rolfe noted in a
letter to the Virginia Company's treasurer Edwin Sandys, the Dutch
traded 20 African slaves for food and supplies.
Indentured Servitude and Slavery
In fact, African slaves may have been present in England's North
American colonies earlier than 1619, but Rolfe's letter is the earliest
hard evidence of the presence of slaves. The British were reluctant to
institute slavery in their new American colonies. They largely relied on
indentured servants in the 17th century.
In 1625, there were only 23 Africans present in the colony of
Virginia, according to historian Betty Wood. Thirty-five years later,
this number had only increased to 950, or around three to four percent
of the colony's population. The colony had many more indentured
servants, and historians like Edmund Morgan argue that the living
conditions and treatment of indentured servants were largely
indistinguishable from that of slaves.
During this period, slaves of African descent and white indentured
servants often worked, socialized and even ran away from their masters
together. But by the end of the 17th century, the colony became more
reliant on slave labor as the number of British and Europeans willing to
indenture themselves declined and as the leaders of the colony feared
uprisings among the poor, landless whites.
The Entrenchment of Slavery
The solution to the constant threat of rebellion from the landless
poor? Raise the status of the poorest whites in the colony by
instituting a system of racial slavery. Morgan sees the turning point in
the rise of slavery in Virginia as coming in 1676 during Bacon's
Rebellion, when Nathaniel Bacon led both white and black men against the
leaders of the Virginia colony. Fearing this display of unity among
poor whites and blacks, Virginia became a colony wholly dependent on
slave labor and phased out indentured servitude.
Sources
- Boles, John. Black Southerners, 1619-1869. University Press of Kentucky, 1984.
- Morgan, Edmund. American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia. W. W. Norton & Company, 2003.
- Wood, Betty. Slavery in Colonial America, 1619-1776. Rowman & Littlefield, 2005.
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