Analysis of the Two Periods of Antebellum South Carolina

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Antebellum South Carolina was a period considered to be between 1790 and the American civil war in 1861. In 1786 the cotton gin was created causing the cotton industry to increase its labor demand due to the increased harvest size on the plantations. Not only was the cotton industry in high demand but also so was rice harvesting causing South Carolina to become a heavily slave populated state. Image A and B both represent two periods of slavery during the antebellum South Carolina. Image A shows an advertisement for a slave sale in Charles Town South Carolina on the Ashley Ferry river, while image B shows an illustration of elderly domestic house servants looking after both white and black children. Image A was taken before the start of the antebellum period in 1760 unlike image B that was sketched towards the end of this period in South Carolina in 1863. The two images represent the change that occurred through the state of South Carolina in regards to slavery. Firstly, image A is an advertisement of slaves that were from the West Coast of Africa. This advertisement was posted in 1760 when slavery was very common in colonial America. South Carolina had one of the largest slave ports that saw over thousands of slave owners and slaves pass through. This advertisement was posted in the South Carolina Gazette with the main goal of attracting owners of rice and cotton plantations. These slaves were being imported from the ‘Windward and Rice Coast’, which was the central Atlantic shoreline in Africa. This would have interested plantation owners, as slaves from this area were familiar with growing and harvesting rice in similar conditions of that in the lower part of South Carolina. These Africans that were brought over as slaves ... ... middle of paper ... ...antic Slave Trade and Slave Life in the Americas: A Visual Record. http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/detailsKeyword.php?keyword=Domestic&recordCount=27&theRecord=11. Krebsbach, Suzanne. “The Great Charlestown Smallpox Epidemic of 1760.” The South Carolina Historical Magazine 97, no. 1 (1996): 30-37. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27570134. Opala, Joseph. “Bance Island in Sierra Leone.” The Gullah: Rice, Slavery, and the Sierra Leone-American Connection. http://www.yale.edu/glc/gullah/03.htm. Walker, Barrington. “King Cotton.” Lecture 12, Queen's University, Kingston, February 12, 2014. Walker, Barrington. “Slavery and Anti-slavery in the Age of the American Revolution.” Lecture 10, Queen's University, Kingston, February 3, 2014. Unknown. “Antebellum Era Collection.” South Carolina Museum. http://www.scmuseum.org/collections/cultural_history/antebellum.aspx

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