Slavery In Virginia In The 1600s

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Race was never an issue in the early 1600s. However, I do think that slavery was inevitable (but, not specifically to race.) There were a couple of problems that Virginia faced when the settlers first arrived that I think are essential to understand. First, there was an abundance of land yet no labor. Second, since there was plenty of lands and no labor, so this restricted the settlers from growing tobacco, which was a big demand in Europe. In fact, there was such a large demand that they suffered from a severe labor shortage. The solution made by the Europeans was indentured servants. People were (in a way) forced to take the position of an indentured servant because of the poverty epidemic in Europe.

Later in the 17th century, the idea of African slavery was alive, yet it was too expensive. Race was actually fluid in the society, even some African Americans owned slaves. It became very popular to own an African slave. I think that over …show more content…

Both of the servants and slaves found ways to secure freedom through earning monetary compensation to purchase their freedom in the 1600s. Their freedom were just like any other free man: they were able to own land, vote, they paid taxes, and had to keep their lives separate from enslaved African Americans. Blacks and whites often lived together, socialized, and had access to the justice system. They seemed to have been treated equally on the state and federal level.

As the demand for slavery increased, race became a large factor, as the only slave trade was with African countries. Race and slavery became related. As slavery became more affordable as powerful white planters began to become more financially divergent than others. Freedom was the objective for blacks. The most common ways for these people to achieve their goal was through manumission and self-purchase. Slave owners saw the act more as a practical incentive than violence when attempting to make slaves work

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