<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >
Using two bills of sale for slaves, this module investigates the antebellum slave market and its impact on slave family life.

Slave sales in the nineteenth-century americas

Historians studying slavery in the Americas and the world have often lamented, with good cause, the difficulty of finding primary sources created by enslaved persons. Instead, historians are often forced to rely upon primary sources that provide a ‘from the top down’ view of slavery. Economic accounts kept by slaveowners is one example of a source base that provides information regarding the lives of enslaved persons, but the accounts have to be approached carefully due to the inherent biases contained within the writings. Two bills of slave sales, available online as part of the ‘Our Americas’ Archive Partnership (a digital collaboration on the hemispheric Americas) and physically housed in Rice University’s Woodson Research Center, serve as valuable entrypoints into classroom discussions of the local economic processes of slave systems and slave family life.

Bill of sale, 1847

bill.png
This is an original bill of sale showing the purchase of "George" for $505. The notes in pencil are not from the period.

This module encourages educators to incorporate these two documentary items within classroom lessons focusing on early to mid nineteenth-century slave life. At the start of the lesson, it might prove useful for a teacher to pass around photocopies, or project the images, of the bills of sale. Students will immediately be struck by the stark simplicity of the documents. One of the bills relates to the sale of “George” in 1847. George was 30 years old and sold for $505. The other bill, dated from 1811, notes the sale of a woman named "Milly&her child” for $330. At this time, it would be important to stress the sensitivity with which we must approach these documents. Educators should convey to their students at the outset that these writings represented the practice of selling human beings and, as such, the conversation has to proceed with a level of respect for the suffering of George, Milly, her child, and the millions of others who endured similar sales.

A slave auction in the south

harpers.png
This image is from an original sketch done by Theodore R. Davis. It appeared in Harper's Weekly on July 13, 1861.

The bills of sale can also be placed within the larger international framework of the economics of slave systems. Sales of slaves occurred on a variety of scales, from entire shiploads of individuals to a single slave being sold. In addition, any location that perpetuated a slave system also had built in mechanisms for slave sales. Students could benefit from a survey of international slave systems using, for example, the study of the Cuban slave market completed by scholars Bergrad, García, and del Carmen (1995). Their work also allows for a classroom exercise involving students in groups, or as individuals, being assigned a particular table from the study, interpreting the data table, and presenting their findings to the class. The authors provide a wide variety of tables including information on: sex, origin, age, place of sale, national origins, and average prices on specific groups of laborers i.e. domestics, drivers, field hands.

Questions & Answers

1. Discuss the processes involved during exchange of fluids between intra and extracellular space.
Mustapha Reply
what are components of cells
ofosola Reply
twugzfisfjxxkvdsifgfuy7 it
Sami
58214993
Sami
what is a salt
John
the difference between male and female reproduction
John
what is computed
IBRAHIM Reply
what is biology
IBRAHIM
what is the full meaning of biology
IBRAHIM
what is biology
Jeneba
what is cell
Kuot
425844168
Sami
what is biology
Inenevwo
what is cytoplasm
Emmanuel Reply
structure of an animal cell
Arrey Reply
what happens when the eustachian tube is blocked
Puseletso Reply
what's atoms
Achol Reply
discuss how the following factors such as predation risk, competition and habitat structure influence animal's foraging behavior in essay form
Burnet Reply
cell?
Kuot
location of cervical vertebra
KENNEDY Reply
What are acid
Sheriff Reply
define biology infour way
Happiness Reply
What are types of cell
Nansoh Reply
how can I get this book
Gatyin Reply
what is lump
Chineye Reply
what is cell
Maluak Reply
what is biology
Maluak
what is vertibrate
Jeneba
Got questions? Join the online conversation and get instant answers!
Jobilize.com Reply

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, Slavery in the americas. OpenStax CNX. Jul 18, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11314/1.3
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'Slavery in the americas' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask