The first 19 or so Africans to reach the English colonies arrived in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619, brought by Dutch traders who had seized them from a captured Spanish slave ship. The Spanish usually baptized slaves in Africa before embarking them.
Define paternalism as it formed a part of the culture of race enslavement. Slaves were acquired by European traders. These traders had either captured the slaves via raids along the coast or from purchasing/trading with local African slave traders.
Slavery was different prior to statehood than it became afterward. Slaves came into the state in small numbers and worked alongside whites at similar tasks. Enslaved men, armed with weapons, even helped defend fortifications against Indian attack.
Answer:
D: The Mount Builders had slaves
Explanation:
Mount Builders were prehistoric American Indians, named for their practice of burying their dead in large mounts. They built extensive earthworks over a long period of time dating from 3500 BCE to the 16th century CE.
The best-known flat-topped pyramidal structure is located in the Cahokia Mounds State historic Site. Cahokia was an urban settlement with nearly 30,000 people. <em>A is not a true statement.</em>
Many archaeological cultures used platform mounds for their religious practices and beliefs such as public temple platforms or mortuary platforms. <em>B is not true.
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The mounds of North America were built over a long period of time by very different types of societies, ranging from mobile hunter-gatherers to sedentary farmers. <em>Statement C is false.
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These cultures evolved into complex hierarchical societies which took slaves and practiced human sacrifice. <em>D is the correct answer. </em>
The Revolutionary War was fought on the premise that Americans have the right to control their own property. In the late 1700s, property included slaves.
During the war, thousands of slaves earned their freedom by fighting on either the British side or the American side. Many also escaped from slavery during the war. The Revolution was built upon ideas of liberty and equality, yet it also reaffirmed America's dedication to slavery. Slaves were human beings, but seen and treated as property. The Declaration of Independence, which was ratified in 1776, stated that people possessed ''certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.'' Most Americans, however, did not believe that slaves had these rights.
America had a long tradition of slavery, and despite the revolutionary ideals that were popular at that time, slavery continued to be the cornerstone of America, its economy, and life in America. It was a major aspect of the American way of life, even after the colonists had fought so voraciously for their own freedom. Slavery was seen as acceptable at that time, as a necessity for harvesting the tobacco and cotton crops in the South. In the coming decades following the Revolution, however, abolitionists would point to the hypocrisy of those who fought for their liberty from Britain, yet still held human beings in forced captivity.
Thomas Paine's pamphlet Common Sense made the colonist realised that these rights were something that they wanted and it made them begin to stand up for themselves since they saw that they way they were being treated wrongly and that its a better way to live life.