Slavery In Early America

1025 Words3 Pages

Early American Slavery; How Could a Country Founded on Liberty Justify the Actions?
Slavery has existed throughout history in numerous different countries and civilizations around the world. However, in America, the first slaves were forced to migrate to the colony of Jamestown in 1619, assisting in agricultural needs. While today in our community there is an understanding that slavery is an inhumane act that demoralizes the individuals involved, it had a huge impact on the growth of Early America, both economically and socially. Slavery itself was a lucrative industry that supplied free labor, besides the upfront cost to purchase a slave. Britain’s occupation of the New World, along with the development of the British colonies and eventually …show more content…

Although in the last century many countries have passed laws to make slavery illegal and a thing of the past, early America utilized this horrible, yet lucrative industry for a benefit to the developing country. In the agricultural states of the south, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia among others, slaves were a popular commodity for production in resources. Resources such as cotton, sugarcane, and tobacco were an integral part of the American economy, as those goods were highly traded throughout the world and were very valuable (Powerpoint). Slave labor was used to produce, manage, and harvest these crops, which ultimately led slaves to produce a large portion of the capital in the early American …show more content…

Although they set these morales, Thomas Jefferson speaks in his “Notes on the State of Virginia” about the disclusion of African Americans in the Declaration of Independence, stating, “and many other circumstances will divide us into parties, and produce convulsions which will probably end in the extermination of the one or the other race” (Jefferson). Many colonists strongly believed that slave labor was a necessity in American society due to the social disconnect that existed between the two races. While the Declaration of Independence states, “all men are created equal,” this statement contradicts how African Americans, and even Native Americans were treated. However, far too profitable for the developing country to abolish, therefore Jefferson and the other founding fathers were forced to leave them out of the Declaration of Independence to avoid an early conflict among the citizens of the United States of

Open Document