Further explanation
legitimate institutionalization of human slavery existed in the United States in the 18th and 19th centuries. Slavery was once carried out in North America in the British colonies from the early colonial period, and was recognized also in the Thirteen Colonies at the time of the Proclamation of Independence in 1776. When the United States was founded , although some free colored people also exist, the status of slaves usually coincides with African descent, this makes a system and tradition in which race plays a very influential role. Slavery in the United States took place legally until the adoption of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865. Slavery had begun since British colonization in Virginia in 1607, even though African slaves had been brought to Florida in Spain in the 1560s.
Most people who are black slaves and are owned by white people, although some natives and black people also have slaves. There are also white slaves, but in small numbers. The majority of slave owners are in the Southern United States, where most are made "machines" for agriculture.
After the United States Revolutionary War of Independence, pro-abolitionist laws and sentiments gradually expanded in the northern states, while the expansion of the bonding industry from 1800 made the Southern states strongly identify with slavery and even wanted to expand it into regions new area in the West. The United States is polarized by slavery into free areas and slaves, along the Mason-Dixon Line that separates Maryland (slaves) from Pennsylvania (free).
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American culture brainly.com/question/11636292
Details
Class: middle school
Subject: history
Keywords: black slaves, human slavery