Author: Marion Mills Miller
Publisher:
Published: 2008-06-01
Total Pages: 416
ISBN-13: 9781436661881
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.
Author: Hinton Rowan Helper
Publisher: Gale Cengage Learning
Published: 1860
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This book condemns slavery, by appealed to whites' rational self-interest, rather than any altruism towards blacks. Helper claimed that slavery hurt the Southern economy by preventing economic development and industrialization, and that it was the main reason why the South had progressed so much less than the North since the late 18th century.
Author: George Washington Williams
Publisher:
Published: 1882
Total Pages: 1152
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: William G. Thomas
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2020-11-24
Total Pages: 429
ISBN-13: 0300256272
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The story of the longest and most complex legal challenge to slavery in American history For over seventy years and five generations, the enslaved families of Prince George’s County, Maryland, filed hundreds of suits for their freedom against a powerful circle of slaveholders, taking their cause all the way to the Supreme Court. Between 1787 and 1861, these lawsuits challenged the legitimacy of slavery in American law and put slavery on trial in the nation’s capital. Piecing together evidence once dismissed in court and buried in the archives, William Thomas tells an intricate and intensely human story of the enslaved families (the Butlers, Queens, Mahoneys, and others), their lawyers (among them a young Francis Scott Key), and the slaveholders who fought to defend slavery, beginning with the Jesuit priests who held some of the largest plantations in the nation and founded a college at Georgetown. A Question of Freedom asks us to reckon with the moral problem of slavery and its legacies in the present day.
Author: Laird W. Bergad
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1995-05-26
Total Pages: 274
ISBN-13: 0521480590
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Slavery was in many ways the fundamental institution in colonial Cuba, whose economy was based on the export of sugar from the slave-worked plantations. This volume presents a quantitative study of Cuban slavery from the late eighteenth century until 1880, the year slavery was formally abolished on the island. The core of this study is an examination of the yearly movement of slave prices and changes in the demographic characteristics of the slave market. Based on data from the notarial protocol records of the Archivo Nacional de Cuba, this book establishes precise price trends for slaves by age, sex, nationality, and occupation, and considers a number of other variables including the prices of coartados (slaves who had begun the process of buying their freedom) and the patterns of emancipation. Incorporating over 30,000 slave transactions from three separate locations in Cuba - Havana, Santiago, and Cienfuegos - this work comprises the largest extant database on any slave market in the Americas.
Author: David Eltis
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2011-07-25
Total Pages: 777
ISBN-13: 0521840686
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The various manifestations of coerced labour between the opening up of the Atlantic world and the formal creation of Haiti.