objective: to examine slave family life and methods of resistance

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Objecti ve: To examine slave family life and methods of resista nce.

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Page 1: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance.

Page 2: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

Image taken from Harper’s Weekly,

July 4, 1863

Life Without Freedom

Page 3: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

· Slaves often worked up to 16 hours per day and were whipped often.

Life Without Freedom

Images taken from Harper’s Weekly,

July 4, 1863

Smithsonian Photography Initiative

Page 4: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

Images taken from Harper’s Weekly,

July 4, 1863

Life Without Freedom

Page 5: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

· Strong family relationships were formed through extended families.

· Owners could separate families by selling husbands, wives, and their children to different buyers.

Five generations of a family born into slavery on aSouth Carolina plantation.

Page 6: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

Resisting Slavery

· Many slaves tried to escape to the North. Few were successful.

· In 1831, an African-American preacher named Nat Turner led a revolt in Virginia, killing 57 whites.

Page 7: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

· Turner was caught and hanged. His revolt, however, increased Southerner’s fears of slave revolts.

Page 8: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

American Colonization Society (1817) – wanted to end slavery by setting up a colony in West Africa for freed slaves.

Page 9: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

· In 1822, the nation of Liberia was formed and several thousand African-Americans settled there.

Page 10: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance

· Most African-Americans wanted to stay in the U.S., which was their homeland.

Trustee R.M. McGill 1846

Page 13: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance
Page 14: Objective: To examine slave family life and methods of resistance