The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
THE SLAVE TRADE

203

Union
soldier

SLAVES FOR SALE


On arrival in the New World, slaves were


taken to markets, where they were sold by


auction to plantation owners. The slaves


were branded—burned with hot


irons—with the mark of their new


owner. Men, women, boys, and girls


were all put up for sale.


HISTORY AND POLITICS

FROM SLAVERY TO CIVIL WAR

Forced labor Slaves were taken
to work on the plantations set up
by European settlers. Life was brutal,
with long hours, poor food rations, no
wages, and frequent beatings. Children
born to slaves became slaves themselves
and belonged to the plantation owner,
who could send them away from their
families to work on another plantation.

Confederate
general

 “THE MOSES OF HER
PEOPLE” Harriet Tubman was
an escaped slave who led hundreds
of other slaves to their freedom,
at great risk to herself. She later
became a leading abolitionist.

 NO ESCAPE From the moment
they were first seized in Africa, slaves
were forced to wear shackles such as
neck collars and ankle fetters. They
were chained together so that they
could not escape.

By the late 18th century, people were
campaigning for the end of slavery.
O The Abolition of Slave Trade Act was
passed in Britain in 1807, outlawing the
slave trade, but slavery itself didn’t end in
the British Empire until 1833, and in the
United States until 1865.
O Abolition was one of the main causes
of the Civil War (1861–1865), since the
Southern Confederate “slave states” did
not want to end slavery—but the Northern
Union states did.
O Abraham Lincoln was one of the key
antislavery figures in the United States. In
1863, he signed the Emancipation
Proclamation, bringing an end to slavery.

An ankle fetter


 IN THE FIELDS Slaves were
made to pick crops such as cotton.
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