Slavery in the North , West , and South Region Can you imagine being separated from your family at a very young age and while being away having to endure hard labor as in picking cotton and harvesting in the field with the fear of being whipped. Slavery was a very difficult time for African Americans. It was very brutal and degrading. In this essay I will compare and contrast Slavery in three different regions and explain why it was such a tough time for African American. Slavery in the Northern Region In the 18th century after American won free from Great Britain and writing the Declaration of Independence, thousands and thousands of blacks were living as slaves in the North. Just like slaves in the South, there were housed in unheated attics and basements in houses build in the back of the master house and barns. Sleeping on the floors wrapped in nothing but thin, coarse blankets. Slaves in the north could also be sold and traded. The difference between Slavery in the north and the rest of the regions was that northerners truly wanted to abolish slavery. They thought it was cruel so around the 1800’s they started to gradually get rid of their slaves. The northerners basically did not need slavery anymore because of the factories. Although it …show more content…
Sunrise to sunset slaves worked in fields and were treated awfully. Forced to live in small wooden cabins with only one per family. In the South it was very hard for slaves to gain freedom. Masters used chains to control them and prevent them from escaping. They were whipped if not beaten to death and sexual abused. Working in the fields until they would sometimes drop dead, with little to no breaks. It was very sad the way these human beings were treated. Physically, mentally, and emotionally battered for what seemed like forever, however that was until the 13th amendment was passed, which outlawed and abolished slavery in the United
Slaves had it hard throughout their lifetime. In the book Chains it gives brief examples of what it was like to be a slave and what some had to go through. In the book it explained a slave's life in plantation, small farm, and the city. Slaves working in plantation were in the rural areas of the country. When the slaves had to work it was a lot harder because of the sun.
The issue of slavery played a part in nearly everyone’s lives during this era. It was debated daily whether or not to keep the system. Adversely in the north, people had many other issues to deal with very few relating to slavery. In the north many people lived in cities. The people who lived in cities were quite poor and lived in slums.
Slavery In The Southwest Slavery in the American South was a struggle for all slaves. Slaves could be beaten and mistreated for all sorts of unfair reasons. Many slaves were tormented for no reason at all. For example, Harriet Tubman was once sent to a dry-goods store to get some supplies when she saw a slave who had left the fields without asking.
The brutality of American slavery prior to the abolishment of slavery after the American civil war of 1861 to 1865 varied depending on the conditions offered by slave masters and particular historical events along with the states which slaves were in (Source A). Evidence suggests that the treatment of slaves especially in the southern region of America (which includes the states South Carolina, Virginia, Florida and Georgia) was horrendous as it included various punishments which scared slaves not only physically but also mentally. The treatment a slave received was also based on the how long the slave or slaves actually worked for a particular owner (Source B). Many testimonials from former African American slaves go on further to show
The working conditions were frustrating and stressful. Genders and different cultures were not treated equally and nicely. The living conditions were terrible and in one small little hut made of grass you would have to share it with like forty people. It was very unsanitary and they had to give up living with family and in their own house for three years and little pay.(stated from the article “Plantation Life”)
Slavery: Negative for slaveholders, as well as, slaves. In the mid 1800s Frederick Douglass grew up, suffered, and conquered slavery. He matured into a brave young adult and went forward with writing his personal experience of slavery, and shared with the readers how slavery impacted his life, his family’s lives, and the slave-holder’s lives. This Narrative has truly been a blessing to generations, and has opened the eyes of all ethnicities around the world.
The struggle of slavery The struggles of slavery show how slaves were treated. Their working conditions were bad and family life was hard.
Since the 20th century , the slavery has been broadly understood as forced labor. Slavery an based on a relationship of submission where one person sees another person and can exact from that person labor. African American got very hard time because they were seen as less than other people through their skin color and culture or low material. As they did not took their civil rights like other civil. From the 1600s, African Americans were treated as slaves for white people.
In the North, the abolishment of slavery was not an immediate change, but over time the North found methods to replace slavery in a manner that would advance the state’s economic growth. As time went on, the North and South grew further apart economically and culturally. The South had so many slaves residing within its borders that slaves grew to make up one-third of the South’s population by 1860. Due to their increasing population, slaves greatly influenced the culture and religious beliefs in the South. People living in the North, had a slightly higher rate of going to school and getting a good education.
Being traded, fed only twice a day a mere few rations, constantly beaten and degraded, working for hours and hours without so much as a 2 minute break. Like animals slaves were being treated as such. Slaves were not considered humans and worthy of being treated as such but as property. Solomon Northup sheds light on the horrible injustices of slavery in Twelve Years a Slave. Going into this text I wanted to look deeper into not just how slaves are treated, but the whole slave culture and how other factors play a role in slavery like religion, values, morals, and relationships.
The treatment of slaves between the North and the South was drastically different. Slaves in the North typically lived in the same house as their master and worked by themselves, or in small groups (pg. 94). Slaves in the South tended to live in large plantations in which they were housed in plantation outbuildings (pg. 104). The difference between the North and the South in housing and working environment had a direct effect on the integration of African Americans into their new American society. When they were housed in the North with their masters and had limited exposure to other slaves, they tended to adopt the ways of their masters.
Douglass also showed the difference of slavery system in South and North. As the increase of black slaves working with poor white indentures on the plantation, it could increase the risk of interracial rebellion of the poor (Lecture 3). Therefore, whites believed slavery system could separate poor whites from slaves and used cruel punishment to keep slaves under whites control (Lecture 3). Douglass explained most slaves in the south were tried to escape to the North though the Underground Railroad. Slavery is still legal in the South.
The Northerners slowly emancipated the slaves once America became a nation. Since the problem was down South they treated slavery as a peculiar institution. They tried to do their best to ignore it but unfortunately, it was impossible to ignore. They decided to embrace slavery as a need. Mostly the owners of plantations of cotton, tobacco, rice, and brokers of cotton and other Commodities.
Most were left unfed and if they disobeyed orders they were whipped and cruelly beaten. However, the most of the South didn 't see slavery as inhumane. To them slavery was needed, slaves were needed to help farm, as well as make profit for their owners. Slavery was seen as a source of
In the 1700-1800’s, the use of African American slaves for backbreaking, unpaid work was at its prime. Despite the terrible conditions that slaves were forced to deal with, slave owners managed to convince themselves and others that it was not the abhorrent work it was thought to be. However, in the mid-1800’s, Northern and southern Americans were becoming more aware of the trauma that slaves were facing in the South. Soon, an abolitionist group began in protest, but still people doubted and questioned it.