Slavery In The 18th Century In Colonial America

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The lives and experiences of indentured and enslaved peoples at the turn of the 18th century in colonial America varies due to their race, age, abilities, and the position of their owners. The history of slavery in the English colonies and historic runaway slave ads from 1745 preserved over history correlate to show this variation.
As long as humans have been on earth slavery and servitude has existed. Slave labor has been integral in history for its role in building and framing societies since those of ancient Greece and Rome. Since then slavery expanded, survived and adapted into the 17th century when it was introduced into the New World. After Columbus’s discovery of the Americas in 1492 various nations such as Britain, France, Spain, and …show more content…

Slavery systems previously instituted in the Old World were very much on a small scale. In the 17th century the slave trade between Africa and the New World became one of the first major international businesses. A huge factor of its growth is due to the much popularized plantation system that started in South America and spread to the North specifically into England’s mainland colonies. The plantation system required a large workforce that did not need to be skilled under one owner. It was extremely successful in providing raw materials, in its crops, that were demanded greatly by mother …show more content…

It was a common, but very risky, practice for the enslaved to runaway from their owner. Colonial newspapers from this time were often littered with advertisements from disgruntled owners for runaway slaves/servants. In 1745 specifically there were forty-two advertisements in the Virginia Gazette and Maryland Gazette pertaining towards slavery. Of those forty-two, twenty-three were ads seeking runaway white servants, seventeen were seeking runaway slaves, and two were for captured slaves. This leads you to believe that white servants were more likely to runaway than black slaves. This very much could be true, in 1717 the British Parliament enacted the convict transportation act which allowed capital crime commuters to basically plea down to a fourteen-year sentence in the colonies. This shows that a majority of white servants were convicts convicted of substantial crimes which then would make sense that they would attempt to break the law and run away. Out of the twenty-three runaway servant ads, the subscriber documents in fifteen that the runaway is a convict. In one ad it was reported that two servant men “barbarously murdered” the skipper of their vessel before running away while they were away doing business for their owner. Another ad reported that two convict Irish servant men shot at their owner’s

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