Slavery In America Research Paper

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The conclusion that can be made about slavery in the United States and across the world is a simple one: slavery is wrong. Slavery has been the cause of death for millions of people, is seen as a bloodstain in the blanket of America and lives on as the deeply planted root of racism in our country today. Yet, without it, it is also evident that the United States would be a completely different country, or quite possibly, not even a nation at all. Slavery has been a factor in the development of the United States since colonization of the Americas first began. Slavery first began to have an impact on the United States with the emergence of the Transatlantic Slave Trade system in the 1600’s. The English American colonies traded a variety of …show more content…

Slaves were used for a variety of different tasks in every one of the thirteen colonies such as …show more content…

Nonetheless, slaves played a role in the Convention and creation of the United States government.The three-fifths compromise, a proposition that three-fifths of the slave population would be counted as people when it came to apportioning representatives to the legislative branch and other positions based on population size. The issue of slavery became a hot topic at the Constitutional Convention as many of the delegates, such as Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin, began to have moral disagreements with slavery. Martin Luther, a slaveholder from Maryland went as far to admit that "[slavery] is inconsistent with the principles of the Revolution…[and] dishonorable to the American character." The delegates compromised by banning the Atlantic slave trade for two centuries, and enforcing the Fugitive Slave Att, which forced every found runaway slave to be returned to it’s rightful owner, no matter where it belonged or was found. However, with the creation of the Constitution, the United States was given a nationalist government that would ultimately lead to the demise of slavery in the nation. As immoral as slavery is, slavery enabled the development of the United States by being provided as a labor system to further the American economy for hundreds of years until its abolition, fighting for freedom during the American Revolution, and enabling

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