CONFRONTING OUR PAST:
WHAT ARE THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN SLAVERY?
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n 1690, one
out of every nine families in Boston owned a slave. In New York City, in 1703, two out of every five families owned a
slave. From Newport, Rhode Island to Buenos Aires, black slaves could be found
in virtually every New World area colonized by Europeans.
Black slaves
arrived in the New World at least as early as 1502. Over the next three centuries, slave traders brought at least
fifteen million Africans to the New World (another twenty percent or more
Africans died during the march to the West African coast and an additional
twenty percent perished during the "middle passage" across the
Atlantic Ocean).
Why
beginning in the sixteenth century did Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch,
Danish, and English colonists all bring African slaves to their New World
colonies? Why did they do something
that we find wholly repugnant morally?
Few
questions have aroused more bitter debate or evoked more impassioned
controversy than the origins of black slavery. Was it, as some have argued, the
product of deepseated racial prejudice? Certainly, there is a great deal of
evidence showing that many Europeans held deeply racist sentiments well before
the establishment of the institution of slavery. We know, for example, that Elizabethan Englishmen associated
blackness with evil, death, and danger.
They portrayed the devil as having black skin and associated beauty with
fairness of skin. Through their
religion, too Englishmen denigrated Africans, claiming that Negroes were the
descendants of Noah's son Ham, who, according to the Old Testament, was cursed
by having black offspring for daring to look upon his father drunk and naked while
his brothers averted their eyes. (In fact, Ham was not the Biblical ancestor of
Africans).
Long before
the English had much contact with Africans racist stereotypes were already
widespread. One English writer claimed
that Negroes were naturally "addicted unto Treason, Treacherie, Murther,
Theft and Robberie." Without a
doubt, Englishmen considered Africans an alien and unassimilable people.
Or was black
slavery the product of a haphazard and random process that took place gradually
with little real sense of the ultimate outcome? Proponents of this line of
argument note that there was nothing inevitable about European colonists
relying upon a black slave labor force. Far from being the result of a
conscious plan, the adoption of black slavery, it is argued, was the resulted
of innumerable local and pragmatic choices, reflecting such variables as the
mortality of the native Indian population, the availability of white servants,
and the cost of African slaves. In every English colony, for example, colonists
initially relied on white indentured servants for the bulk of their labor
needs--not on black slaves. They finally settled on African slaves because of
supply shortages and the threat of revolt among white indentured servants.
Still others
insist that slavery was the product not of racism but the outgrowth of European
attitudes toward the poor. European
societies were based on the principle of inequality. Elizabethan Englishmen
flogged the poor and forced them to toil in work houses. Far from finding the
idea of slavery repellant, Elizabethan Englishmen accepted the idea, for
example, adopting a statute in 1547 allowing persistent vagabonds to be
enslaved and branded with the letter "S."
Once slavery
was introduced, slavery carried farreaching consequences for the future. By assuming positions formerly occupied by
an underclass of unruly and despised white servants, black slaves helped to
create a remarkably "free" and affluent society of whites, committed
to the principles of liberty and equality.
Questions
to think about:
1. What, in your view, is the most compelling
explanation for why European colonists adopted racial slavery?
2. How would you account for the depth of racial
prejudice in Elizabethan England?