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Immigration and Slavery

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Presentation on theme: "Immigration and Slavery"— Presentation transcript:

1 Immigration and Slavery
Chapter 3 Section 1 Immigration and Slavery

2 Objectives Explain how European immigration to the colonies changed between the late 1600s and 1700s. Analyze the development of slavery in the colonies. Describe the experience of enslaved Africans in the colonies.

3 Immigrants from many backgrounds brought diversity to the colonies.

4 New groups immigrated in the 1700s. Scots and Scotch-Irish
Germans Became the largest immigrant group. Became the second largest immigrant group. Motivated by poverty and easy legal access as part of Great Britain. Motivated by war, taxes and religious persecution. Worked as merchants in the tobacco trade and farmed from Pennsylvania to the Carolinas. Mostly settled in Pennsylvania and farmed.

5 Diversity in the colonies meant that:
No group was large enough to impose their beliefs on other groups. People realized that when they got along in a diverse society, everyone benefited.

6 Colonists used slaves as a source of labor.
Farmers, particularly in southern colonies, needed a work force to grow labor-intensive crops of tobacco, rice, and indigo. Traders began to purchase slaves from African merchants and transport them to the colonies to sell to plantation owners.

7 Africans were taken by force from West African countries to the colonies and Europe.

8 During the Middle Passage, Africans were shackled together into small spaces below a ship’s deck.

9 By the mid-1700s, the triangular trade of goods and slaves was well-established.
Manufactured goods were traded for captured Africans. Slave traders carried captured Africans to American colonies in the Middle Passage. Enslaved Africans were sold to colonists for raw materials. Traders took raw materials to England to be turned into manufactured goods.

10 Slavery in the Southern Colonies
Enslaved Africans worked 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, in fields growing labor-intensive crops. Most enslaved Africans were given limited clothing and food, and lived in crude huts on plantations. Enslaved Africans were closely supervised by white overseers who often whipped those who resisted being enslaved. Slave labor represented a small minority of the workforce in New England and the Middle Colonies. They worked as farmhands, sailors, dock workers, and house servants.

11 Africans reacted to enslavement by:
Rebelling Uprisings of Africans against their white owners often occurred. Running Away Africans ran away and lived in forests and swamps, or fled to Spanish Florida where they were free. Resisting Africans subtly and purposefully worked slowly or feigned illness.

12 Africans blended their various African traditions into the culture.
They modified African instruments and music, and created new musical traditions.

13 Freed slaves spoke out against slavery
Freed slaves spoke out against slavery. After he gained his freedom, Olaudah Equiano wrote a widely read book about his enslavement.

14 Phillis Wheatley became the first African American poet to publish a book of poems in America.
Her Boston owner allowed her to learn how to read and write. Her poetry could be seen in newspapers, but despite wide praise, colonial publishers refused to publish a book of her work.

15 Objectives Explain how European immigration to the colonies changed between the late 1600s and 1700s. Analyze the development of slavery in the colonies. Describe the experience of enslaved Africans in the colonies.


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