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Slavery

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Slavery s Dehumanization One Account Mr. Burwell came to the cabin, with a letter in his hand. He was a kind master in some things, and as gently as possible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slavery


1
Slaverys Dehumanization
2
One Account
  • Mr. Burwell came to the cabin, with a letter in
    his hand. He was a kind master in some things,
    and as gently as possible informed my parents
    that they must part for in two hours my father
    must join his master at Dinwiddie, and go with
    him to the West, where he had determined to make
    his future home. I can remember the scene as if
    it were but yesterday - how my father cried out
    against the cruel separation his last kiss his
    wild straining of my mother to his bosom the
    solemn prayer to Heaven the tears and sobs - the
    fearful anguish of broken hearts. The last kiss,
    the last good-by and he, my father, was gone,
    gone forever.
  • Keckley, Elizabeth, Behind the Scenes, or Thirty
    Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House
    (1968, republished 1988).

3
  • This picture is a contemporary sketch of a
    plantation.
  • This picture reflects a common working day.

4
Chattel vs. Cattle
  • Whats the difference? What effect does the word
    chattel have on us today?
  • 'Elisha,' chattel No. 5 in the catalogue, had
    taken a fancy to a benevolent looking middle-aged
    gentleman, who was inspecting the stock, and thus
    used his powers of persuasion to induce the
    benevolent man to purchase him, with his wife,
    boy and girl, Molly, Israel and Sevanda, chattels
    Nos. 6, 7 and 8.
  • New York Daily Tribune, March 9, 1859 reprinted
    in Hart, Albert B., American History Told by
    Contemporaries v. 4 (1928).

5
On the Selling Block
  • 'Look at me, Mas'r am prime rice planter sho'
    you won't find a better man den me no better on
    de whole plantation not a bit old yet do mo'
    work den ever do carpenter work, too, little
    better buy me, Mas'r I'se be good sarvant,
    Mas'r. Molly, too, my wife, Sa, fus rate rice
    hand mos as good as me. Stan' out yer, Molly,
    and let the gen'lm'n see.'
  • Molly advances, with her hands crossed on her
    bosom, and makes a quick short curtsy, and stands
    mute, looking appealingly in the benevolent man's
    face. But Elisha talks all the faster.
  • 'Show mas'r yer arm Molly - good arm dat mas'r -
    she do a heap of work mo' with dat arm yet. Let
    good mas'r see yer teeth Molly - see dat mas'r,
    teeth all reg'lar, all good - she'm young gal
    yet. Come out yer Israel, walk aroun' an' let the
    gen'lm'n see how spry you be.'
  • New York Daily Tribune, March 9, 1859 reprinted
    in Hart, Albert B., American History Told by
    Contemporaries v. 4 (1928).

6
In Bondage In Freedom
7
Always in Fear
  • On May 24, 1854, after only three months of
    freedom, Anthony (a former slave) was sighted by
    a slave hunter, immediately imprisoned and taken
    before a court where his fate would be decided.
    His incarceration sparked outrage among the
    citizenry of Boston. This seething anger came to
    a head three nights later when an angry mob
    stormed the Court House where he was being held
    in an attempt to free the hapless prisoner. They
    were unsuccessful. Efforts were then made to
    secure the slave's freedom by buying him from his
    master. But this too was unsuccessful.
  • "Return of a Fugitive Slave, 1854", EyeWitness
    to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2005).

8
Always in Fear
  • At eleven o'clock, Court Square presented a
    spectacle that became indelibly engraved upon the
    memories of men. The people had been swept out of
    the Square, and stood crowded together in Court
    street, presenting to the eye a solid rampart of
    living beings. At the eastern door of the Court
    House, stood the cannon, loaded, and with its
    mouth pointed full upon the compact mass. By its
    side stood the officer commanding the detachment
    of United States troops, gazing with steady
    composure in the same direction. It was the first
    time that the armed power of the United States
    had ever been arrayed against the people of
    Massachusetts. Men who witnessed the sight, and
    reflected upon its cause, were made painfully to
    recognize the fact, before unfelt, that they were
    the subjects of two governments.

9
Frederick Douglass
  • What kind of woman does Mrs. Auld appear to be?
    What part does Mr. Auld play in her character?
  • How do you view Douglasss character? What does
    he write that illustrates this view?
  • How does Douglass use irony to reinforce
    slavery's dehumanizing influence?
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