Characteristics Of Indentured Servitude

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Indentured servitude was a method used by the New World colonists to get cheap labor and also, simultaneously, acted as a means to attract more settlers into the growing providence. Though the position was not considered as inferior as a slave, the conditions of indentured servitude were demanding and often times even more strenuous than slavery because of the impermanence of the job. Indentured servants were often viewed as expendable; therefore, their masters often treated them as such by not providing to adequately meet basic human needs or abusing their disciplinary powers.

With the colonists’ spirits being lifted by the triumphant discovery of the New World, the early1600s were an exciting and progressive time period. English settlers …show more content…

Because so many were eager to escape the authoritative demands of England’s monarchial government but were too poor travel freely, many chose indentured servitude as a means to get a foothold in the colonies. Most indentured servants were young and had been sent by their parents to earn money and gain land in the New World. Others who were willing to endure the turbulent years of servitude did not have any other options because they were often convicts, prostitutes, peasants or some other form of social outcast that had no better chance of survival in England than in the unrelenting conditions of early colonization. This is one of the primary reasons indentured servants, if able to survive, were willing to succumb to such grueling conditions, because they had either already experienced worse or because servitude was their only …show more content…

African Americans’ service contracts were often abused, essentially making them lifelong slaves to the plantation. As seen repeatedly throughout history, racial prejudice was a large issue among the new colonies and when it came to indentured servitude, those of ethnic decent often received the worst negligence from contract abuse to physical abuse, and in this case, masters were commonly not held accountable for their grotesque actions. Fortunately, there were some African Americans who were rightfully granted their freedom and benefits at the end of their servitude and, thus, were able to build a life in the New

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