How did slavery in America get started?
Slavery in all the places that are now the United States began with the enslavement of indigenous people. European colonists expanded slavery by forcibly taking Africans to the Americas. In 1619, the Jamestown colonists bought 20 to 30 enslaved Africans from English pirates. Although Africans had already been living in the Americas, transported mainly by the Portuguese and Spanish, many historians point to the ship’s arrival more than 400 years ago to be the beginning of American slavery. By the end of the transatlantic slave trade in the early 1800s, about 12.5 million men, women, and children had been taken from their homes in Africa to North and South America.
Why was enslavement allowed to happen?
The main purpose of American slavery was to provide labor that would benefit enslavers. Enslavers used the many types of highly skilled work of enslaved people to make money for themselves. Slavery was central to the development and growth of the colonial economies and what is now the United States.
Enslaved people in the North were forced to work on farms and in homes. They were also forced to help build the early cities of Boston and New York, work on the docks, and do skilled labor, such as blacksmithing and shoemaking. The labor of enslaved people was seen as essential to economies of the South, especially on cotton plantations. The business of selling enslaved people was also critical in the South.
Enslavers controlled much of the federal government from 1787 through 1860. Additionally, protections for slavery were written in the founding documents of the United States. Enslavers passed laws and made court rulings that protected the practice of slavery.
Didn’t anyone fight to end the injustice of slavery?
Many people, both White and Black, worked individually and in groups to end slavery. These people, called abolitionists, fought to change the laws that protected enslavement. Eventually, national disagreements about slavery became so strong that 11 Southern states seceded (broke away) from the United States in an attempt to form their own country. This led to the Civil War, which lasted from 1861 to 1865.
Why were Southern states willing to go to war to protect the practice of slavery?
Slavery was essential to the success of the Southern economy. Enslaved people were seen as property and represented wealth. If slavery ended, enslavers would lose both property and labor. That labor was crucial to farming and many other industries. The end of slavery would bring about a financial crisis for the South. The North’s economy was less dependent on the labor of enslaved people, so the end of slavery would have had less impact on their lives.
Can people still be enslaved?
In the U.S., slavery was abolished by the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Most other countries also have laws against slavery. But in some parts of the world, people are still forced to work with no pay and little or no freedom. The United Nations and other groups are fighting to end modern slavery.
An important reason for studying the past is to understand why events happened and learn about how the present is influenced by the past. By studying facts, we can make sure we create a safe and equal future for all people.