Slave Plantations Cotton Slave Plantation in the Southern Colonies

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Slave Plantations
This article on Slave Plantations providing facts and information
about the different Slave Plantations in Colonial America:
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Slave Plantations
Life on a Slave Plantation
Trade and Economic activity in the Slave Plantations
Slave Auctions
The role of the overseer and the owners of the slave
plantations
History Timeline of Slave Plantations
Cotton Slave Plantation in the Southern Colonies
History of trade, plantations, colonialism and colonization in the 13 Colonies
Slave Plantations: Slaves in the southern colonies and the Slave Auctions
Slave Plantations
What were Slave Plantations? Definition of Slave Plantations: Slave Plantations can be defined as large farms in the colonies that used
the enforced labor of slaves to harvest cotton, rice, indigo, sugar, tobacco and other farm produce for trade and export. Typical Slave
Plantations ranged from 500 to 1,000 acres and each acre produced about 5,000 plants. Slave Plantations were vital to the profitability of
the large farms located in the Southern colonies in Colonial America.
Slave Plantations in the Colonial South
The agriculture system based on Slave Plantations was implemented in the Southern Colonies during the Colonial period. The five
Southern Colonies who introduced the system of Slave Plantations were composed of the Maryland Colony, Virginia Colony, North
Carolina Colony, South Carolina Colony and the Georgia Colony. The reason that Slave Plantations sprang up in the South was due to
the geography and climate of the Southern colonies.
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The Geography of the Southern Colonies featured fertile soil, hilly coastal plains, forests, long rivers and swamp areas
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Climate of the Southern Colonies: Mild winters and hot, humid summers made it possible to grow crops throughout the year and was
ideally suited for Slave Plantations
The Southern Colonies concentrated on developing the enforced labor-based Slave Plantations
The slave plantations raised various crops. The main slave plantations were as follows:
 Cotton Plantations
 Tobacco Plantations
 Rice Plantations
 Sugar Plantations
 Indigo Plantations
For full details of the crops refer to the article on Plantations
Slave Trade starting in Africa
The Slave Plantations and the Slave Auctions
The slave trade started in West Africa when unfortunate men and women were forcibly dragged from their homelands and forced on to
the slave ships. The slave ships followed a terrible 3000 mile route called the Middle passage to the West Indies and later to America.
This Atlantic trade route was part of the English policy of Colonialism, Mercantilism and Triangular Trade. One the slaves had reached the
areas of the Slave Plantations they were sold at slave auctions.
Slave Auction
The Economy of the Slave Plantations
The economy of the Slave plantations were based on a system of agricultural mass production requiring a large labor force. Southern
Slave Plantations were labor intensive requiring thousands of slaves across the southern colonies. There was no machinery to help the
slaves and only oxen and horses for power - and these were in short supply. Vast areas of land areas had to be cleared for planting and
crops had to be sewn and harvested by hand. Cheap labor was essential for the Slave Plantations to become profitable. Tobacco, rice,
cotton, sugar cane and indigo were valuable plants and grown as cash crops.
Owners of the Slave Plantations
The owners of the large Slave Plantations were called planters and belonged to the planter aristocracy of the Southern Colonies. The
owners of the Southern Slave Plantations were often the younger sons of British landowners, who perpetuated the English system of the
'landed gentry'. These wealthy owners emulated the lifestyle of the noble aristocracy and gentlemen farmers of England. The planters
used some of their slaves as household servants. The houses of the planter aristocracy lived in Georgian style mansions often featuring
frontages with Grecian style columns and large verandas.
Life on the Slave Plantations - the Role of the Overseer
On the large Southern Slave Plantations the owners relied heavily on overseers to run their Slave Plantations. Overseers were men hired
by planters to manage and direct the work of slaves. Overseers were usually from the white, badly educated lower class - totally different
from the refined plantation owners. The overseers were under considerable pressure from the plantation owners to maximize profits. In
order to meet the requirements of the owners the overseers used fear to motivate the slaves and increase productivity. The punishments
used by the overseers against slaves included the use of the cart-whip. The role of the overseer in the Slave Plantations gained scant
respect - they were looked down upon by the owners and slaves alike.
Slave beaten by an Overseer
Life on the Slave Plantations
Life on the Slave Plantations in some ways emulated the life of a small village. Some of the Slave Plantations were massive and
consisted of the main house or mansion, slave quarters, a dairy, blacksmith's shop, laundry, smokehouse and barns which made the
Slave Plantations to large degree, self-sufficient. Crops were traded for items that could not be produced on the Slave Plantations. These
items included farm tools, expensive textiles and furnishings, shoes, lace, and dishes. Slaves, both men and women, worked all year
round undertaking back breaking work for up to 18 hours per day. The women were compelled to do as much as the men even if they
were pregnant. The use of slaves kept the costs down on the Slave Plantations. The plantation slaves lived in basic, crude wooden
cabins consisting of one or two rooms, often with a dirt floor, in the slave quarters.
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