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  1. #1
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Largest African American Slave Owner And Breeder

    Largest African American Slave Owner And Breeder

    <font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Roboto">

    The Real Hidden Colors Of Slavery

    Published on Jul 27, 2014
    Largest African American Slave Owner And Breeder William Ellison


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgVxc9aLs14

  2. #2
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    "America: Imagine the World Without Her" is a 2014 American political documentary film by Dinesh D'Souza based on his book of the same name. It is a follow-up to his film 2016: Obama's America (2012). In America D'Souza contends that parts of United States history are improperly and negatively highlighted by liberals, which he seeks to counter with positive highlights. (and he was investigated by O's orders, found guilty of a small straw campaign contribution and fined, jailed, harassed).

    In the movie America, he mentions the fact that many blacks owned slaves and the fact that many more in numbers Europeans were sent to this country as indentured servants. If you were prosperous, you had one or the other or both.

    The excerpt below is @ Southern use - Northern use was heavy too but in different jobs.
    Indentured Servants

    Industry and Idleness" border="0" height="191" width="250">William Hogarth, 1747
    This picture, Industry and Idleness shows 2 apprentices starting in identical circumstances, one is the industrious Francis Goodchild and the other is the unsuccessful Thomas Idlefrom.

    The growth of tobacco, rice, and indigo and the plantation economy created a tremendous need for labor in Southern English America. Without the aid of modern machinery, human sweat and blood was necessary for the planting, cultivation, and harvesting of these cash crops. While slaves existed in the English colonies throughout the 1600s, indentured servitude was the method of choice employed by many planters before the 1680s. This system provided incentives for both the master and servant to increase the working population of the Chesapeake colonies.
    Virginia and Maryland operated under what was known as the "headright system." The leaders of each colony knew that labor was essential for economic survival, so they provided incentives for planters to import workers. For each laborer brought across the Atlantic, the master was rewarded with 50 acres of land. This system was used by wealthy plantation aristocrats to increase their land holdings dramatically. In addition, of course, they received the services of the workers for the duration of the indenture.
    This system seemed to benefit the servant as well. Each indentured servant would have their fare across the Atlantic paid in full by their master. A contract was written that stipulated the length of service — typically five years. The servant would be supplied room and board while working in the master's fields. Upon completion of the contract, the servant would receive "freedom dues," a pre-arranged termination bonus. This might include land, money, a gun, clothes or food. On the surface it seemed like a terrific way for the luckless English poor to make their way to prosperity in a new land. Beneath the surface, this was not often the case.


    Only about 40 percent of indentured servants lived to complete the terms of their contracts. Female servants were often the subject of harassment from their masters. A woman who became pregnant while a servant often had years tacked on to the end of her service time. Early in the century, some servants were able to gain their own land as free men. But by 1660, much of the best land was claimed by the large land owners. The former servants were pushed westward, where the mountainous land was less arable and the threat from Indians constant. A class of angry, impoverished pioneer farmers began to emerge as the 1600s grew old. After Bacon's Rebellion in 1676, planters began to prefer permanent African slavery to the headright system that had previously enabled them to prosper.


    http://www.ushistory.org/us/5b.asp

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