The trips from these different countries to America were tremendously awful. Many people died of diseases and were thrown overboard. The people on the ships were packed like animals and had to watch each other suffer and die. They decided to either kill themselves or fight because they didn’t know where they were headed or going. Little food was given to them during the trip but before they reached the U.S., they were given extra food so that they would look better and healthier so the owners earn more money at the slave
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade The Atlantic slave trade began in the early sixteenth century and extended all the way to the late nineteenth century. It involved the transportation of millions of Africans to the Americas. These Africans were forced to leave their countries in order to become the slaves of the newly found American colonies. Just the journey across the seas to the America’s was highly inhumane cramming hundreds of people onto small boats. The reason that the African slaves were needed was because they were strong and good workers.
The Great Depression in Canada The Great Depression in Canada was a very difficult time. Almost everybody was affected by this brutal time period. The Great Depression profoundly affected the family unit. Children found themselves in orphanages and were working for a very small pay and out of school. Men struggled to maintain and find jobs to support his family, and women struggled to put food on the table and care for her children with the little or no money that the men brought home.
But by the end of the Civil War in 1861 almost all of the slaves were free. Some slaves by serving in the Revolutionary war and some by running away to the northern states. When every state promise to free their slaves after fighting against the British state after state abolished slavery and antislavery grew and grew. This pressured the southern states to end slavery. 2.
Slavery brought economic means to the South, death to hundreds of thousands of African men, women and children, as well as shape African American culture. Because of their freedom, African Americans helped shape American culture because of their various impacts on our culture; they brought jazz, the blues even rock and roll, traditions such as “jumping the broom” (as seen in wedding traditions) and Kwanza eventually made its way into American culture. Though it became a great and tragic part of history, it eventually became ‘freedom’ that our country now stands
African Americans have suffered in slavery for many years, almost 400 years. They were forced by the owners to pick cotton in the hot sun, lived in shacks, with very poor living conditions and were whipped if they didn’t listen to their masters. If they knew how to read the would also be whipped and some masters even raped the female slaves. In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln managed to free some slaves but not all. In 1865 he managed to free all the slaves.
Most people who worked in the factories lived in the factories which had little living space, lack of proper ventilation and lack of proper hygiene (Wikipedia). Due to the poor living conditions and overcrowding people were subject to health issues and death related from communicable diseases. Along with the poor living conditions, hunger and malnutrition were common during this time. Labor laws did not exist. Workers worked long hours without breaks and children were also subjected to these cruel working conditions as they were often put to work alongside their parents.
After 1890 many Southern governments passed a series of laws that set up a system of segregation that would last until the mid-twentieth century. This system meant that black people were forced to live separately from white
By this time slavery had been abolished throughout a large portion of the world and oddly enough this Brazilian curiosity raised much interest from all around the globe. The images suggest a wide variation in what it meant to be enslaved during the time before abolition in Brazil in 1888. The photo on the left portrays a typical field slave under the watchful eye of an overseer during the violent enslavement of Africa. African slaves were predominantly field workers and were notorious for attempting to escape due to their overly oppressive enslavement. On the other hand the picture on the right portrays a slave for hire in which were owned to work independently in the streets as carriers or vendors.
Conditions on America-bound slave ships were a disgrace. Slaves were chained to the floors in spaces no bigger than a coffin. They laid in their own excrement not being able to move. Many times the sailors came to find the slaves in suffocation, dead, and trying to kill others for a desperate breath. One of three blacks died overseas.