Blacks in Colonial America

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McFarland, 2015 M09 3 - 301 páginas

By the time of the American Revolution, blacks made up 20 percent of the colonial population. Early in colonial history, many blacks who came to America were indentured servants who served out their contracts and then settled in the colonies as free men. Over time, however, more and more blacks arrived as slaves, and the position of blacks in colonial society suffered precipitous decline.

This book discusses the lives of blacks, both slave and free, as they struggled to make homes for themselves among the white European settlers in the New World. The author thoroughly examines colonial slavery and the laws supporting it (as early as 1686, for example, New Jersey had laws demanding the return of fugitive slaves) as well as the emancipation movement, active from the beginning of the slave trade. Other topics include blacks and the practice of Christianity in the colonies, and the service of blacks in the Revolution.

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Contenido

Preface
1
1 The Concept of Slavery
3
2 African Roots
17
3 The Slave Trade
23
4 The Slaves Life in Colonial America
47
5 Africans in New England
65
6 Africans in the Middle Atlantic Colonies
79
7 Africans in the South
97
9 Colonization
145
10 Opposition to Slavery in Colonial America
157
11 Miscegenation
181
12 Slave Rebellion and Black Codes
189
13 Blacks and Christianity
217
14 Blacks in War
229
Notes
257
Index
287

8 The Freedmen
123

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Acerca del autor (2015)

The late Oscar Reiss, was a retired physician and the author of The Jews in Colonial America (2004) and Medicine and the American Revolution (1998). He lived in San Diego.

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