WIREFRAME ONLY - NOT YET DESIGNED

  • Topic
  • About
  • Impact of Age
  • Enslaved and free Africans often had to delay marriage and starting a family, investing years of toil to painstakingly assemble funds to purchase their own or a spouse's freedom.
  • The Bars Fight Poem
  • Lucy Terry Prince's poem describes the last attack on Deerfield, Massachusetts, by Native American soldiers. It occurred on August 25, 1746.
  • States of Unfreedom
  • While conditions of enslavement varied and some had opportunities for limited autonomy, the arbitrary power of enslavers and involuntary bondage remained a constant.
  • Torn Asunder
  • Enslaved people faced enormous challenges to creating, nurturing, and sustaining family ties as parents, spouses, and children could be sold at a moment’s notice to new captors anytime, anywhere.
  • Marriage in Early New England
  • The head of an 18th-century household had the power to permit or forbid those under his control, including enslaved people, from marrying.
  • Supporting the Colony
  • African American and Indigenous people knew the bitter irony of fighting for freedom alongside colonial enslavers.
  • Great Chain of Being
  • Those living in servitude in another's household--apprentices, wage laborers, indentured servants, and enslaved people most of all--occupied the lowest rungs In a society predicated on inequality of condition.
  • Building Community
  • Community building was essential for Black Americans living in the early republic as most were enslaved and many lived in the homes of their enslavers.
  • Coercion and Abuse
  • The coercion that was part of daily life for enslaved people could also include physical and emotional abuse.
  • Possible Paths to Freedom
  • While a variety of paths might lead to freedom, even the most determined freedom seekers encountered dangers and challenges that could prove insurmountable.
  • Enslaved Labor for Sale
  • Enslavers hired out their enslaved; those who did not own people benefited from their labor by hiring those enslaved by others
  • Courtship in Early New England
  • Couples in early New England generally expected to endure scrutiny from family and community members alike, even more so for enslaved women or men wishing to wed.
  • Unlikely Enslavers?
  • Myth: Ministers’ religious beliefs and occupation made them unlikely enslavers.
  • Everyday Resistance
  • Enslaved people resisted coercion and oppression in a variety of ways as they struggled to retain some personal control over their daily lives.
  • The Economics of the Slave Trade
  • The Trans-Atlantic slave trade played a crucial role in New England agriculture and trade throughout the colonial period.