Preview

us history slavetrade worksheet

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
282 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
us history slavetrade worksheet
SLAVE TRADE DATABASE EXERCISE QUESTIONS/QUERIES

In 1732, the slave ship Diligent under Captain Pierre Mary purchased slaves from and transported them to .

In 1655, the slave ship, Witte Paard, arrived in New York with slaves.

From 1607 to 1650, how many voyages listed the principle region of slave landing in Mainland North America? In what year did it arrive with slaves? What was the name of the vessel?

How many slave voyages were listed for the years 1514 to 1607?

How many slaves were disembarked after the United States banned the slave trade in 1808? (use the date range 1808 to 1866 for this question) How many of those disembarked in Mainland North America?

The writer of the hymn “Amazing Grace,” John Newton, served as a slave ship captain. Fill out the following chart on all of his voyages. (questions 3–5)
Vessel Name Year Arrived with Slaves Principal Region of Slave Purchase Principal Region of Slave Landing

With the information provided, complete the following chart:
(Hint: the Summary Statistics tab will make this easier)

Number of Voyages Number of Slaves Embarked Number of Slaves Disembarked Percentage who died on voyage Length of Middle Passage Percentage of Males Percentage of Children
Dates: 1607–1690 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Brazil Dates: 1607–1690 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Caribbean Dates: 1607–1690 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Mainland North America Dates: 1607–1690 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Spanish American Mainland Dates: 1691–1808 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Brazil Dates: 1691–1808 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Caribbean

Dates: 1691–1808 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Mainland North America Dates: 1691–1808 Principle Place of Slave Landing: Spanish American Mainland

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    3. (12 points) Describe the change that took place in the African slave trade in the 1500s. Describe the Middle Passage and its toll.…

    • 310 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The number of Africans shipped as slaves to America has been conservatively estimated at 10 million. That number doesn't include the thousands who died along the way. Some estimates have concluded that 15 to 25 of every 100 Africans died on those voyages. The practice of slavery had a history of hundreds of years. It was made illegal in America in 1807, although it continued in small part for many years after…

    • 1665 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A map like this gives you all kinds of openings for outside information. Think about prior Constitutional crises prior to 1850 (like the Missouri Compromise situation) and how this legislation changed that. The notion of popular sovereignty, of course, is a great one for thinking about Constitutional principles related to people having a “voice” in their government.…

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Contrary to what many people in this country believe, slavery took place in the North and the South. In fact, Massachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery. By the year 1700, Rhode Island had surpassed Massachusetts as the chief importer of slaves in the north. Major slave ports included Boston, Salem, Providence, and New London. The tariffs that were enforced upon slave imports were used to pay for community projects, such as repairs to roads and bridges.…

    • 1165 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1609-1610 Jamestown, Virginia experienced a great famine. After this famine the settlers experimented to find a crop that would help them survive. Tobacco was the crop Jamestown found to help them survive.* Jamestown was able to grow fields and fields of tobacco, but there was not enough people to work the fields. At first, the men of the English working class supplied the labors for the fields. Indentured servants were also brought in to work the fields. But such workers were susceptible to disease and often proved unreliable as they could always choose to leave work behind and return to their people.* In 1619 Jamestown didn 't have enough white people to work the land so they bought about 20 African workers.…

    • 876 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many died on the voyage to the Americas because of the conditions held on most ships, which contained large amounts of excrement that would make people on board sick. With the few that did survive were then sold to people in need of laborers. The Atlantic Slave trade arose which consisted of a triangular trade route that had involved the exchange of goods from Europe to Africa which then would be traded for more slaves. Slaves would be captured by the traders but more commonly exchanged with West Africans. Majority of slaves were sent to Brazil, Spanish America and the Caribbean’s which is where they were mostly needed since many cash crops needed laborers to harvest. By 1635 ships began regular slave cargos to the Americas which resulted in an increase of migration slaves. From 1635 to 1639 a total of 137 slaves were imported to…

    • 624 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    (ii) In about 1619, the first blacks came to America (though they weren’t really considered slaves)…

    • 2675 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the sixteenth and seventieth century, Europeans began the plantation agriculture in the New World. They grew sugar, tobacco, rice, cotton. As the New world land became more available and convenient, civilized and fertilized for Europeans, the need of labor augmented. The west and West central African states, who were already involved in slave trading, supplied Europeans with African slaves across the Atlantic Ocean. Slaves were inexpensive to Europeans standard, they tend to live longer compared to European laborers who were vulnerable to diseases. Slavery is very much different from labor. Therefore, Africans became the major source of New World plantation labor. Nonetheless, they were not labor, but it was slavery. Slavery…

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Black slaves were used throughout colonial times. The one we associate with slaves the most is probably field working. The truth is Black people were used for much more than that; their responsibilities included many jobs, from farming, to being cooks and housekeepers. In the south, some people would train their slaves to have trade skills, such as cooper (barrel maker), wigmaker, and carpenter. This could be helpful to the slave owners in many ways. Blacks that were trained in a trade could also be sold for more money, as they were considered more valuable. In addition, they could just be more helpful around the house and therefore spared the conditions of harder…

    • 398 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    So, once the slave ships arrived, they were laden with trade goods and slaves who were taken to the New World in long journeys shackel to one another. The captains started taking around 300-400 slaves in each ship, and they ended up taking around 800-900. The fisrt journeys during the 17th century, took from 35 to 50 days, and a lot of the slaves died all along the trip. Although, during the 18th century, the ships were bigger and the journeys took around 30 days. The captains tried to make the trips as short as possible because they knew that more days at the sea, implicated more deaths among the cargo. Before leaving the coast where they laden all the slaves and goods, the crew offered gifts to the leaders at the coast and paid taxes for the right to trade.…

    • 1384 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    History is host to a seemingly countless number of atrocities. Our knowledge of these events is limited to the records left behind for historians to study. One of history’s greatest recorded atrocities is the transatlantic slave trade that occurred from the fifteenth century to the eighteenth century. The incredible amount of records that exist about the transatlantic slave trade provides great insight into its participants, functionality, and eventual end.…

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Portuguese first began to take part in the slave trade. In 1526 they completed the first transatlantic slave trade. The shipowners regarded the slaves as cargo to be traded quickly to work for labor in many different plantations like coffee, cocoa, sugar, and cotton. About 12 million Africans were traded across the Atlantic. The purchace of slaves…

    • 510 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In 1444, the first ship of enslaved Africans returned to Lisbon. When the ship returned, the crown was delighted, this caused more shipments to be made. This is the start of where race and freedom became more closely related. Between 1490 and 1530, the slave trade increased, with the Portuguese bringing between 300 and 2,000 slaves to Lisbon each year. After this, slavery became intertwined with sugar and the demand for slaves increased. In 1518, transatlantic slave trade began. By 1550, slaves were being brought to Brazil. From there, the slave trade expanded more and most enslaved people were Africans. After its founding in 1621, the Dutch West India Company transported thousands of Africans to Brazil and the Caribbean. The Dutch West India Company came to be a big player in slave trade.…

    • 575 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Slavery took place in Colonial America in a complicated way. Around 1960 historians describe slavery in certain in a way, which leads them to think that there is differences between Whites and Blacks when it comes to intelligence, civilization, morality or physical capacity. All of the sudden White starting to think they should be the leader of people from Africa. They think that people from Africa should be the one doing all the hard work. Then the Civil right movement began in the 20th century, which lead historians to rethink about race and also, that African are just as smart and capable of doing the things that White people are capable of doing. Slavery then became racial slowly in colonial America, which means slavery were force labor and was not dealt with race. The thing is not all forced laborers were black and to be black did not mean they were enslaved. Most of the Africans in America were enslaved. From early moments in the history of slave traders came to Jamestown around 1690 and in Massachusetts by 1630. Slavery began to grow slowly from east to west until after the American Revolution, slavery was not well know in the south at this time. Many of the men In Jamestown was indentured servants they were brought to America to work without pay under a rich white person for many years before they could become free. Indentured was over used during this time before slavery became well known. So for example the African that were brought to Jamestown in 1619 were not brought to be slave they were brought to be indentured servants. Some Africans were enslaved but they all had the same status as White indentured servants. White and black indentured servants were not treated very well. Just like African slaves, white servants received the same treatment. This typical labor lasted for several years for white and black. Most of them started to run away. They used to pay people back then to find slaves that ran away. Most slaves started to see each other as equals…

    • 1972 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    After 1619, when the White Lion, a Dutch ship, brought 20 Africans ashore at the British colony of Jamestown, Virginia, slavery spread throughout the American colonies. Historians have estimated that 6 to 7 million slaves were imported to the New World during the 18th century. Once the slaves were imported they were then auctioned off to the highest bidder. After the auctioning, they were delivered to their new owner, who then put them to work.…

    • 347 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays