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SLAVERY, BRITAIN'S PUSH FOR EMPIRE, and ENLIGHTENMENT THOUGHT

Slavery, freedom, and empire

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Page 1: Slavery, freedom, and empire

SLAVERY, BRITAIN'S PUSH FOR EMPIRE, and ENLIGHTENMENT

THOUGHT

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SLAVE TRADE

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FREEDOM AND SLAVERY

• Land, Labor, Staple equation

• Three distinct slave systems existed in the British colonies

• Chesapeake Bay

• South Carolina and Georgia

• Non-plantation societies of New England and the Middle Colonies

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Early Slavery: Chesapeake

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FREEDOM AND SLAVERY• Chesapeake Bay’s slave system

• Based primarily on tobacco plantations

• Plantations small

• Daily interaction between masters and slaves

• Slavery transformed society into a hierarchy based on freedom

• Large planters

• Yeoman farmers

• Indentured servants and tenant farmers

• Slaves

• Slavery codified slowly, starting in 1660s

• Race divisions begin

• Black= slave

• White= free

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FREEDOM AND SLAVERY

• South Carolina and Georgia’s slave system

• Slavery based on rice cultivation

• Rice and indigo required large-scale cultivation

• By 1770, slaves comprised about ½ of SC population

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GANG SYSTEM vs TASK SYSTEM

• Chesapeake planters tended to favor the gang system: slaves worked together in groups of varying sizes from dusk to dawn with breaks for meals

• Lowcountry planters assigned tasks based on age/gender• Once these were

completed to the satisfaction of the overseer, no more work was required for the rest of the day

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FREEDOM AND SLAVERY

• Slavery in the North• Both agricultural and

urban slavery

• Large estates rare; winters made agricultural slavery unprofitable

• New York: Largest colonial slave population

• Pennsylvania: Eve of Revolution, no more than 8% of Philadelphia pop. were bonded servants

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DOMESTIC SLAVERY

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SLAVE CULTURE

• In the Chesapeake Bay colonies, slaves learned English and participated in the Great Awakening

• They were thoroughly exposed to English culture and assimilated into main-stream society

• In South Carolina and Georgia, slaves participated in two contrasting societies:

• African culture: consisted primarily of slaves who worked in rice plantations

• Euro-American culture: consisted primarily of urban servants (house workers)

• In the Northern colonies, slaves developed a distinct African-American culture much slower than their counterparts

• Slaves had more access to main-stream society and culture

• They were also not as legally restricted as in the South

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SLAVE RESISTANCE• A common sentiment for slaves in America

was the desire for freedom

• Many colonial slaves ran away to Spanish Florida and cities in Northern colonies

• The first slave uprising was in New York (1712)

• Other rebellions:

• Stono Rebellion (1739) – led to a more restrictive slave code

• New York City Fires (1741) – rumored to be part of a slave conspiracy to attack colonists

• As a result, sentiment towards free blacks and slaves worsened

• Numerous slaves were executed in the aftermath

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FRENCH AND INDIAN WARS

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FRENCH AND INDIAN WARS

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SEVEN YEARS’ WAR• Begins in 1754 as the British attempt to

remove the French from western Pennsylvania

• War not officially declared until 1756

• For the first four years, the British lose--- and badly

• Successes in 1758: Duquesne, Louisburg, Frontenac

• Most North American fighting ends in 1760

• Change in British strategy caused by death of George II

• Fighting in North America continues with Anglo-Cherokee War

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01/20/13

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TREATY OF PARIS (1763)

• Changed the economic, political, and social relations between Britain, France, and Spain

• France and Britain suffered financially and with long-term consequences

• Britain gains French Canada and Acadia (80,000 primarily Roman Catholic French speakers)

• Spain trades Florida to regain Cuba, also gains Louisiana from France

• Mississippi River open to ALL for trade

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PONTIAC'S WAR• The reason for the

Proclamation of 1763 and the creation of an “Indian Reserve”

• Native anger over British policies in the Old Northwest• Major General Jefferey

Amherst, CinC British Army in North America, cuts back on diplomatic gifts, which he considered a form of bribery

• Many natives viewed this policy change as an insult, and that the British viewed them as a conquered people, not allies

• Restrictions on gunpowder and ammunition

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The American Enlightenment

1680-1820

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Enlightenment Thought

•Four recurring themes:•Modernization• Beliefs and institutions become based on science,

rationality, and religious pluralism

• Skepticism• Doubting appeals to miraculous, transcendent and

supernatural forces

• Reason• Liberty• Assumed a central place in theories of political

association, specifically as limits state authority originating prior to the advent of states (that is, in a state of nature)• Social contracts: addresses the questions of the origin of

society and the legitimacy of the authority of the state over the individual

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Six Key Ideas

•Deism: understanding God’s existence as divorced from holy books, divine providence, revealed religion, prophecy and miracles; instead basing religious belief on reason and observation of the natural world• Liberalism: the notion that humans have natural rights and that government authority is not absolute, but based on the will and consent of the governed• Republicanism: commitment to the notion that a nation ought to be ruled as a republic, in which selection of the state’s highest public official is determined by a general election, rather than through a claim to hereditary right

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Six Key Ideas • Conservatism: promotes retaining traditional social institutions• Toleration• Scientific progress

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THE GREAT AWAKENING

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THE GREAT AWAKENING• A period of heightened religious activity in the colonies between the late 1720s and 1740s

• Brought on by the arrival of young Anglican pastor George Whitefield

• Whitefield traveled through the colonies preaching enthusiastically

• Visited towns, villages, and the backcountry (known as circuit riding)

• Known for attracting large, emotionally charged crowds and generating considerable controversy

• Other preachers such as Jonathan Edwards generated immense controversy through his sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

• What was their goal?

• Attempt to compel non-Christians to covert to Christianity and those who were lost to recommit to God

• Controversial because they rejected Calvinism and segregation in church services

• Conservative church members particularly did not care for the circuit riders

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George Whitefield Jonathan Edwards

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THE GREAT AWAKENING• Factions

• “Old Lights” – conservative church members who rejected the controversial preaching of the circuit riders

• “New Lights” – liberal church members who came under scrutiny for supporting the circuit riders and accepting blacks into white church services

• What did the movement achieve?

• Split Protestantism into more denominations; Presbyterians were especially affected, strengthened Baptist and Methodist congregations

• Had little effect on Anglicans and Quakers

• Became social criticism for colonial society

• Rejected slavery in particular

• Eventually, “New Lights” eclipsed “Old Lights” and ushered in a new era of religious influence in the colonies

• Became a great influence of connecting God’s will with the Revolutionary War in the 1760s and 1770s