American History - Slide Into Slavery

By the latter half of the seventeenth century, thousands of indentured servants were working their asses off throughout the colonies of Virginia and Maryland.  Little better than slaves, their masters controlling every little aspect of their lives, and with only limited legal protection, their fate was completely up the whim of rich asshats who did everything from beat them to rape them.  All in all it wasn’t all that great, but at least it had a definitive beginning and end.  The answer is of course, as it almost always is, a lack of other opportunities.  England, a relatively small island, was rapidly filling up with people, making it increasingly difficult to make a living.  In comparison, the New World seemed a wide-open paradise, one which after around seven years of hell, would be opened to anyone willing to pay the price of admittance.  By law, those who completed their contracts as indentured servants were entitled to a certain amount of land and enough goods to set themselves up a nice little farm, which all together was a pretty sweet deal given the English colonies had a much higher standard of living then back in England.

Of course, not everybody was really happy with this arrangement.  For example, many religious leaders of the time weren’t really down with the idea of enslavement, at least when it concerned other English folks.  The big rich plantation owners weren’t really all that down with it either.  Not was tobacco a labor intensive crop, but it was also one which just beat the shit out of the soil, requiring a constant shift towards newer and more fertile soils to keep profits as high as possible.  Something made more difficult by having to constantly give away nearby land to people they only recently had the right to beat the shit out of for no good reason.  The fact that a certain number of these people were formerly convicts as well only added to the general feeling that there had to be a better way, which this being the seventeenth century, of course meant a better way of treating people like shit and exploiting them for profit. 

The first African slaves arrived in Virginia in 1619, only twelve years after the founding of Jamestown, when a Portuguese slave ship was blown off course.  Not sure what exactly to do with them, the Jamestown settlers decided that they could live out their lives as indentured servants, which seemed the kindest thing to do at the time, you know, other than treating them like human beings.  For most of first half of the seventeenth century, African slaves were more of a curiosity than a major source of labor.  The second shipment of slaves didn’t even arrive until nearly a decade later in 1628.  Though increasingly common in the sugar plantations of the Caribbean, the use of African slaves for tobacco production was seen as prohibitively expensive given the domination of the trade routes to Africa first by the Portuguese and then by the Dutch.  However, this began to change in the latter half of the seventeenth century, a shift which was fueled by the creation of the English owned Royal African Company in 1660, which made the importation of African slaves much more affordable, and both Virginia and Maryland outlawing the shipment of convicts to their shores in 1670. 

For the plantation owners of Virginia and Maryland, slaves imported Africa was the perfect solution to their labor issue, a perfectly horrific solution.  Though at first legally considered indentured servants, few if any Africans could read or write English, meaning it was ridiculously easy to exploit them and basically force them into a permanent life of indentured servitude.  Not being from England, there were also fewer busybody religious types complaining about how they were treated, meaning their owners could feel free to really let themselves go when it came to beatings, rapes, and other such monstrous behaviors.  As a result, the number of African slaves in Virginia and Maryland rose from less than 600 in 1640 to some 28,000 by 1700.  As the practice became more normalized, the pretense that what was going on was anything but slavery fell away.  Virginia formally legalized the enslavement of Africans in 1661, followed by Maryland in 1664.  In both colonies, the status of children was tied to the status of their mothers, meaning unlike indentured servants, the children of African slaves were automatically slaves themselves.  Soon after, further laws were put in place, barring Africans from moving freely, gathering together, or owning firearms.  Whippings became much more common.  By the end of the 1600s, any and all rights Africans might have had were completely stripped away, leaving them property rather than people, no different than livestock.  A slave owner could literally beat their slave to death in the middle of the town square with no consequence other than perhaps a fine for making a mess.  It was the beginning of a terrible system, one which would eventually tear the United States apart and still reverberates to this day.

Now to be fair to what was going on along the Chesapeake Bay, this was not a new or unheard of practice for the time. Most civilizations around the globe at the time practiced some type of slavery. What made the African slave trade different was the sheer distances involved. Historically speaking, slavery was a fairly localized affair. Though various peoples might be enslaved, it was not uncommon to see similar looking people walking around all free and whatnot, which made it rather hard not to question the ethics of such arrangements over time. Even in the case of Native Americans, though viewed by Europeans as inferior, the fact that multiple opportunities existed to interact with non-enslaved natives created a sense that enslavement was not the norm. The same could not be said of African slaves. Shipped across the Atlantic to lands completely devoid of any people like them that weren’t slaves, it was frighteningly easy for those who purchased them to assume that such an arrangement was part of the natural order of things, even to the point that they were able to completely remove all sense of those they enslaved being fellow human beings.

American History - Indentured Servitude

Here’s a little fun fact about tobacco.  It’s pretty damn labor-intensive to grow the damn stuff.  Between the planting, the harvesting, and the drying, it just took a lot of work for some jackass back in England to enjoy a good toke on their pipe after lovemaking or whatever.  As you can probably imagine, this caused a bit of a problem for the tobacco farmers in Virginia, who really didn’t want to pay out the nose for labor.  Luckily, this was the seventeenth century, when solutions that seem terrible today were just hunky dory and peachy keen.  While there weren’t many English folks just sitting around, there were a hell of a lot of Native Americans, who didn’t seem to have anything better to do, at least from the point of view of the colonists.  Of course, the natives really didn’t agree with this assessment, which is probably why the colonists began forcing them to be slaves.

Now to be fair, it should probably be stated that slavery wasn’t a new concept for the natives living in what is today Virginia.  For generations it had been common practice to force people captured in raids and wars to be servants for the victors, so selling such people to the colonists for some sweet ass European goods wasn’t all that much of a leap.  However, what was different was the fact that in general, aside from some occasional ritualistic torture, slavery was more of a temporary thing to most Native Americans, with captives slowly integrated fully into the tribe.  In comparison, the colonists didn’t really see integration as an option, meaning that natives sold to them as slaves were pretty much screwed for life.  Now for some reason, the natives weren’t really down with this system, and as a result they made every effort to escape.  However, this really wasn’t the big issue.  A much more significant problem as the fact that enslaved natives kept dying pretty regularly from various Old World diseases, which was less than optimal for the tobacco farmers wanting to exploit them. 

Though the enslavement of Native Americans continued throughout the seventeenth century, it really didn’t fulfill the overall demand for labor, especially as tobacco plantations began to grow larger.  As a result, the colonists shifted to a new strategy, which involved shipping in poor people from England.  Now at the time, lots of English folks wanted to get to the New World, what with all the “free” land just waiting to be seized from the quickly dying off natives, but getting a boat ride across the Atlantic was ridiculously expensive.  To get around this, rich people began paying the cost of passage in return for around seven years of indentured servitude, which is a nice way of saying people sold themselves into slavery for a temporary period of time.  Now though indentured servants did have some rights, for example you just couldn’t up and kill them or something like that, they otherwise could be treated the same as slaves in every other regard, up to and including buying and selling them.  This, along with the fact that indentured servants already spoke English, didn’t die as easily from Old World diseases, and really didn’t have anywhere to go if they ran away, gave them a distinct advantage, or a disadvantage depending on from whose perspective you’re looking at it from, compared to Native Americans.

The colonists in Virginia preferred indentured servants so much, that not only did they pay out the nose for them to be shipped across the Atlantic, but the colonial government sweetened the deal by offering free land to any ship captain who brought them across.  This made the shipment of indentured servants very lucrative, which of course in no way led to any types of abuse.  At first this was mostly just the usual amount of lying and taking advantage of the desperate and illiterate, getting them to sign contracts without fully being aware of what exactly it was they were signing.  However, as people began to get wise to such hijinks, the more seedy ship captains found new ways to get their hands on previous human cargo, one of the more successful being the shipment of prisoners. 

Now it’s probably important to understand that at this point in history people in England were beginning to question whether or not killing or maiming people was really the best way to deal with lawbreakers.  The growth of urban centers like London was leading to a growth in crime, and there are only so many public hangings you can see before you start to wonder about their effectiveness.  As a result, prisons were becoming fuller than ever, and though not officially legal, the government was more than happy to turn a blind eye towards shipping convicts across the ocean and forcing them into indentured servitude.  After all, out of sight out of mind.  Of course there are some people who might say shipping a bunch of convicts across the ocean isn’t really all that much of a solution to anything, but will wait for next week to get into that.          

American History - Cavalier

By 1644 in Virginia, the Powhatan Confederacy were getting really tired of the English and their bullshit.  Though they had a treaty worked out following two previous wars, the English were continually starting farms on Powhatan lands, driven by the arrival of new settlers and the fact that tobacco just plain wrecked the land on which it was grown.  Finally having enough, the Powhatan launched a surprise attack, killing some 500 settlers in just a few days.  Apparently lacking pattern recognition, the Powhatan then went home, convinced that the English would recognize they were being dicks and stop being such a pain in the ass.  However, instead they launched a two-year war, killing every Powhatan they could find, causing the complete collapse of the confederacy.  The surviving tribes either fled west or south, or signed a treaty which forced them to pay tribute to the English and created small reservations for them which were seized or sold over the next two decades.  The war ended with the English effectively in control of everything east of the Appalachians. 

No longer really worried about the natives anymore, the English focused more on being dicks to each other.  The English Civil War was in full tilt by this time, and though the Puritan colonies of New England were firmly on the side of Parliament, the colonists of Virginia supported the king.  This really had no affect on day to day life, except for Virginia being such dicks to any Puritans living in the colony that most left to Maryland where they were dicks to the Catholics.  However, things changed when Oliver Cromwell became de facto dictator of England.  At first, Virginia basically declared its independence, but this idea was quickly given up on when an English fleet showed up at Jamestown.  However, Cromwell then pretty much left Virginia alone, letting them to do whatever the hell they wanted, even to the point that they basically elected their own governor, a position formerly appointed by the powers that be in England. 

This actually worked out pretty well for Virginia.  Thanks to an influx of former supporters of the king, called cavaliers, the population of the colony rose from 10,000 in 1640 to 40,000 in 1670, helping making Virginia the wealthiest and most populist English colony in the New World.  Though much like England, most things like the government and church were controlled by a bunch of rich asshats making up only 5 percent of the free population, the wide availability of fertile land, thanks to being complete dicks to the Powhatan, allowed for the development of a large land owning middle class which represented some 60 percent of the population, much higher than back in England.  The remaining 35 percent were all pretty much poor as hell, being mostly former indentured servants, but much like most history, we’re just going to gloss over them for now.  The majority of people living in Virginia, at least the free ones, were prosperous as hell, leading to further immigration and larger families, because nothing says prosperity like having your wife pop out kids until she died.  Virginia was viewed as a land of opportunity, where a man could raise himself up from lowly beginnings to become someone respectable.  By 1700, the population reached 70,000.

In 1660, Charles II was welcomed home to England and crowned king.  However, rather than rewarding Virginia for its unbending loyalty, he instead went about trying to fuck the colony as much as possible.  Not only did he randomly give big chunks of land in the colony away to various lackeys, much of which was already settled, he as well appointed a new royal governor who was not only corrupt, but also an autocratic dick who halted all free elections in the colony.  However, this was nothing compared to the passage of the Navigation Acts starting in 1661, which required all imports and exports from the colony to be carried on English ships only to and from England.  While this was great for the merchants back in England, it was not all that great for the settlers in Virginia, who were decidedly not happy with the whole chain of events. 

Things finally came to a head in 1674, when a series of native attacks on farms along the frontier caused a widespread call for the royal governor to call up the militia, something he refused to do.  Of course, these attacks were largely due to issues surrounding the settlers dickishly seizing land and being unable to tell one tribe from another.  However, the royal governor didn’t give two shits about any of this, instead refusing because he was worried it would disrupt the fur trade, of which he was a major investor.  Not liking this turn of events, a large group of settlers rose up under the leadership of a recently arrived rich plantation owner named Nathaniel Bacon, who led his ersatz army to Jamestown where they burned the settlement to the ground.  Despite this initial success, Bacon’s Rebellion only lasted a few months more, ending when Bacon shit himself to death and the colonial militia scattered the remaining rebels.  Though ultimately a failure, Bacon’s Rebellion did result in a more tractable governor being put in place, who was more down with being a dick to the natives, and the re-establishment of free elections. Combined with the relative differences in prosperity between the colony and the homeland, created a sense in Virginia of being more than just a colony.