Slave Patrol Essay

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Slave patrols began in South Carolina, during the year 1704. Slave patrols were enacted by colonials who warranted the use and regulation of slavery through laws which limited enslaved individuals attempts and or ability to escape, establishing and requiring rules which required all settlers to assist in the enforcement of these new slave codes. Those who participated in slave patrols where noted as patrollers, patty rollers, or paddy rollers by slaves. A slave patrol consisted of groups of three to upwards of six white men who imposed discipline against black slaves who were found to have traversed away from their plantation with either the intention of escaping or simply intermingling amongst other slaves on other plantations. These groups …show more content…

South Carolina’s slave codes were based off of the English slave codes of 1688 that were employed in Barbados. South Carolina’s slave codes where the baseline for slave patrols, giving them the rights to beat, abuse and even kill slaves thought to be in violation of their codes, as well as giving slave owners totality of their slaves. It should be noted there were slave codes for Northern states as well (Christian, 1998), however, they were less severe toward escaped slaves, though they still followed many of the same provisions as their Southern codes i.e. forbidding of slaves leaving their owner’s land without proper authority from their owner, or whites and the trade of alcohol to slaves, and a explanation on the proper punishment to be handed down for escape by …show more content…

Slave patrollers would eventually turn from tracking slaves to controlling and keeping the peace of American towns (Victor E, 2014). Therefore, due to slave patrols’ moral assimilation from strictly hunting down fugitive slaves to becoming modern-day vigilantes, no future possibilities of better actions may be precluded from a slave patrol standpoint. However, associations to its more modern day form can be made, such as prevalent training of law enforcement officers on the need to not associate certain races with crimes. This association has led to, in certain situations, cases of African American imprisonment or “head hunting” for African Americans, such as when trying to conclude a unsolved case, or impromptu searches of African Americans based purely on skin complexion, so much so that one could even draw stark comparisons between slave patrollers and their desire to search any and all African Americans for proper documents to be away from their plantation. This showed a predestined association to breaking the law, and in modern times, police still stop and search African Americans due to the same intentions of slave patrollers – associating African Americans, unfairly and without cause, with infringement of a law of some

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