Difference Between Slavery And Indentured Servitude

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During the seventeenth century, colonists began to establish permanent settlements and emerge their own way of life in these new colonies. The colonists’ way of life often revolved around the environment they were surrounded by. Land in the Chesapeake region was not completely suitable for the settlers. However, the land was very useful for the cultivation of tobacco. The economies in the Chesapeake thrived on tobacco, but they required workers for this labor intensive crop. Thus, two major labor systems were introduced: indentured servitude and slavery. Despite the fact that both systems were introduced to the Southern colonies for the same reason, slavery and indentured servitude still functioned differently and were introduced at different times throughout the American colonial era. Cultivating tobacco in the Chesapeake colonies required more labor and many plantation owners looked to the farmers in England desperate for employment. These …show more content…

Both these labor systems were introduced for the same reason, which was the need for more laborers. Plantation owners that grew tobacco required more workers since tobacco took intense labor and they needed people who were willing to perform this work. Using slaves and indentured servants were the owners’ ways of fulfilling these requirements because they were accessible and most of the workers could tolerate the living conditions in the South, compared to the frail Indians who died on contact with Whites. Regardless of this similarity slavery and indentured servitude shared, plantation owners still had different methods of going about to obtain their workers. While indentured slaves were imported from England at their own will, African slaves were captured and put on crowded ships, forced to endure the suffering of the “middle passage,” which is the transatlantic sea voyage that brought these slaves to the New

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