
A slave sale advertisement from 1769
This week in our series, we we tell about slavery, and how it affected the history of the United States.
 
Slavery is the custom of one person controlling or owning another. Some  history experts say it began following the development of farming about  ten thousand years ago.  People forced prisoners of war to work for  them. Other slaves were criminals, or people who could not re-pay money  they owed.
 
It is said the first known slaves lived more than five thousand years  ago in the Sumerian society of what is now Iraq. Slavery also existed  among people in China, India, Africa, the Middle East and the Americas.  It expanded as trade and industry increased. This increase created a  demand for a labor force to produce goods for export. Slaves did most of  the work. Most ancient people thought of slavery as a natural condition  that could happen to anyone at any time. Few saw it as evil or unfair.  In most cities, slaves could be freed by their owners and become  citizens.
 
In later times, slaves provided the labor needed to produce products  that were in demand. Sugar was one of these products. Italians  established large sugar farms beginning around the twelfth century. They  used slaves from Russia and other parts of Europe to do the work. By  the year thirteen hundred, African blacks had begun to replace the  Russian slaves. They were bought or captured from North African Arabs,  who used them as slaves for years.
 
By the fifteen hundreds, Spain and Portugal had American colonies. The  Europeans forced native Indians to work in large farms and mines in the  colonies. Most of the Indians died from European diseases and poor  treatment. So the Spanish and Portuguese began to bring in people from  West Africa as slaves. France, Britain and the Netherlands did the same  in their American colonies.
 
England's southern colonies in North America developed a farm economy that could not survive without slave labor.
 
Many slaves lived on large farms called plantations. These plantations  produced important crops traded by the colony, crops such as cotton and  tobacco. Each plantation was like a small village owned by one family.  That family lived in a large house, usually facing a river. Many  separate buildings were needed on a plantation. For example, a building  was needed for cooking. And buildings were needed for workers to produce  goods such as furniture that were used on the plantation.
 
The business of the plantation was farming. So there also were barns  for animals and buildings for storing and drying crops. There was a  house to smoke meat so it could be kept safely. And there was a place on  the river from which goods were sent by ship to England.
 
The plantation owner controlled the farm and saw that it earned money.  He supervised, fed and clothed the people living on the property,  including the slaves.
 
Larger plantations might have two hundred slaves. They worked in the  fields on crops that would be sold or eaten by the people who lived on  the plantation. They also raised animals for meat and milk.
 
Field slaves worked very long and hard. They worked each day from the  time the sun rose until it set. Many of these slaves lived in extreme  poverty in small houses with no heat or furniture. Sometimes, five or  ten people lived together in one room.
 
House slaves usually lived in the home of the plantation owner. They  did the cooking and cleaning in the house. House slaves worked fewer  hours than field slaves, but were more closely supervised by the owner  and his family.
 
Laws approved in the southern colonies made it illegal for slaves to  marry, own property, or earn their freedom. These laws also barred  slaves from receiving an education, or even learning to read. But some  owners permitted their slaves to earn their freedom, or gave them money  for good work.
 
Other owners punished slaves to get them to work. The punishments  included beatings, withholding food and threatening to sell members of a  slave's family. Some plantation owners executed slaves suspected of  serious crimes by hanging them or burning them alive.
 
Historians say that people who were rich enough to own many slaves  became leaders in their local areas. They were members of the local  governments. They attended meetings of the legislatures in the capitals  of their colonies, usually two times a year. Slave owners had the time  and the education to greatly influence political life in the southern  colonies...because the hard work on their farms was done by slaves.
 
Today, most people in the world condemn slavery. That was not true in  the early years of the American nation. Many Americans thought slavery  was evil, but necessary. Yet owning slaves was common among the richer  people in the early seventeen hundreds. Many of the leaders in the  colonies who fought for American independence owned slaves. This was  true in the Northern colonies as well as the Southern ones.
 
One example is the famous American diplomat, inventor and businessman  Benjamin Franklin. He owned slaves for thirty years and sold them at his  general store. But his ideas about slavery changed during his long  life. Benjamin Franklin started the first schools to teach blacks and  later argued for their freedom.
 
Slavery did not become a force in the northern colonies mainly because  of economic reasons. Cold weather and poor soil could not support such a  farm economy as was found in the South. As a result, the North came to  depend on manufacturing and trade.
 
Trade was the way colonists got the English goods they needed. It was  also the way to earn money by selling products found in the New World.  New England became a center for such trade across the seas. The people  who lived there became shipbuilders so they could send the products to  England. They used local wood to build the ships. They also sold wood  and wood products. They became businessmen carrying goods around the  world.
 
The New England shipbuilding towns near the Atlantic Ocean grew quickly  as a result. The largest of these towns was Boston, Massachusetts. By  seventeen twenty, it had more than ten thousand people. Only two towns  in England were larger: London and Bristol.
More than twenty-five percent of the men in Boston had invested in  shipping or worked in it. Ship captains and businessmen held most of the  public offices.
 
The American colonies traded goods such as whale oil, ginger, iron,  wood, and rum, an alcoholic drink made from sugarcane. Ships carried  these goods from the New England colonies to Africa. There, they were  traded for black Africans who became slaves in the American colonies.
 
The Africans had been captured by enemy tribesmen and sold to African  slave traders. The New England boat captains would buy as many as they  could put on their ships. Conditions on these ships were cruel. The  Africans were crowded together and forced to travel in areas so small  they could hardly move. Some were kept in chains. Many killed themselves  rather than live under such conditions. 
 
Others died of health disorders they caught on the ship. Yet many did  survive the trip, and became slaves in the southern colonies, or in the  Caribbean islands. Black slaves were needed to work on Caribbean sugar  plantations. The southern American colonies needed them to work on the  tobacco and rice plantations.
 
By seventeen fifty, almost twenty-five percent of the total number of  people in the American colonies were black slaves. From the fifteen  hundreds to the eighteen hundreds, Europeans sent about twelve million  black slaves from Africa to America. Almost two million people died on  those slave ships.
 
Historians say English ships carried the greatest number of Africans  into slavery. One slave ship captain came to hate what he was doing, and  turned to religion. His name was John Newton. He stopped taking part in  the slave trade and became a leader in the Anglican Church. He is  famous for having written the song, "Amazing Grace".
 
You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and  pictures at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook  and Twitter at VOA Learning English. I’m Steve Ember, inviting you to  join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history  in VOA Special English.