Abraham Lincoln and The Voice of The Abolitionists

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Slaves had an expanding economic force for the Europeans. “Trade between the Europeans and Africans created the first route of the triangular slave trade”. African citizens were “forcibly removed from their homes to never return”. Sales of Africans were classified as having the full cooperation of the “African kings” in return for various trade and goods. Africans who were exchanged were forced to walk chained to the coast of the Indian Ocean. Once at the coast they were stripped of all their clothes, men, women and children all alike with just a loincloth, or strips of blue tap for women to cover their chest area. Once the Africans boarded the ship they were divided by sex, males in the bowel of the ship and the women on the upper deck. The men would be chained side by side by their necks with barely enough room to move. African women were forced to do the “unmentionable acts”. Neither were fed or watered well, and the men would be forced to sit in their own “excrement, and vomit”. Once in awhile the men would be brought to the deck and rinsed off with cold water. While on deck they would be forced to dance to “entertain the ships crew”. Many Africans would try to “revolt” or commit “suicide”, when revolting against their captors many Africans would die. For as much as “3- 6 months” the Africans would endure these torments. Once the ship ported in the America’s shore, all the Africans would be “cleaned up and stripped naked to be sold”. Once the Africans were sold they were no longer Africans to the Merchants, they were product, and, no longer having rights as humans; they were caught into what is called chattel slavery. For approximately “246 years” African Americans would endure such bondage. September 22 of this ye... ... middle of paper ... ...dships for the African Americans in the south. They were still being treated as slaves, and still being bought and sold amongst other slave purchasers. If they revolted in anyway, severe punishments would be given, an example would be separating children from their parents, and sold off elsewhere. Georgia had suffered the greatest of these losses, Works Cited Bragg, William H. Reconstruction in Georgia. April 22, 2014 http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history archaeology/reconstruction-georgia (accessed April 22, 2014). Guelzo, Allen C. 2009. Abraham Lincoln As a Man of Ideas. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2009. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed April 22, 2014). Henretta, James A., Rebecca Edwards, and Robert O. Self. America A Concise History. Vol. 1. 1877 vols. Boston, Massachussettes: Bedford St. Martins, 2012.

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