EVOLUTION OF THE INSTITUTION OF SLAVERY
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EVOLUTIONOF THE INSTITUTION OF SLAVERY
Evolutionof the Institution of Slavery
Outline
The institution of slavery in colonial America from 1600.
The need for slaves and first slave arrivals in 1619 in the US.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE INSTITUTION OF SLAVERY FROM 1600
The acquisition, purchase, selling and reselling of slaves from Africa to America.
Relationship between large plantations and the development of the institution of slavery in the US.
The role of the institution of slavery to the economies of the colonial world and the New World.
EXPANSION AND INDEPENDENCE OF SLAVERY IN 1740
Reduction of slave trade dueindependence of slavery institution in America.
Increase in African American families, leading to a collapse of slave trade in the Trans-Atlantic Trade.
Ownership of property and animals by African American slaves.
THE ROAD TO FREEDOM FROM SLAVERY IN THE NEW NATION FROM 1800
Participation of slaves in the American Revolution.
The effects of the American Revolution and declining tobacco economy on the institution of slavery
Steps towards abolition of slavery in the North following the Declaration of Independence.
THE END OF SLAVERY IN AMERICA FROM 1830.
Abolition of slavery institution following the Civil War.
Contribution of constitutional rule and the Kansas-Nebraska Act in ending slavery.
The ultimate end ofthe slavery institution by President Lincoln and the Thirteenth Amendment.
CONCLUSION
Bibliography
Digitalhistory,2011. Slaveryin Colonial North America: 1600-1860. [Online]Available at:http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=81[Accessed30 03 2017].
Miers,S., 2015. Slaveryin Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives. Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press.
Richardson,J., 2016. TheNegro in Maryland: A Study of the Institution of Slavery, Volume 6.London: BiblioLife.
Schneider,T., 2015. TheInstitution of Slavery in North Carolina, 1660-1865. NewYork : Duke University.
Stringfellow,T., 2017. ABrief Examination of Scripture Testimony on the Institution ofSlavery. NewYork : Fb & C Limited.
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