A 1735 law banned slavery in the new English colony of Georgia. The colony\u27s Trustees considered slavery to be incompatible with their aims of using the colony to provide a subsistence living for England\u27s poor and to provide a buffer between South Carolina and Spanish Florida. In the ensuing years, various parties linked the colony\u27s failure to thrive (and their own failure to succeed within Georgia) to the lack of an enslaved labor force. By 1750, the Board of Trustees relented to pressure and enacted what they considered to be a humane slave code. Evangelist George Whitefield and teacher and merchant James Habersham were both proponents of legalizing slavery in order to support the Bethesda orphan home, which they established ne...
This dissertation explores the relationship between Virginia’s early development and the transatlant...
Despite local histories that have been published on the history of Columbus, Georgia, and its school...
This dissertation explores the development of slavery in Massachusetts, including the influence of P...
A 1735 law banned slavery in the new English colony of Georgia. The colony\u27s Trustees considered ...
Whether through legal assault, private manumissions or slave revolt, the institution of slavery weat...
Conceived primarily as a case study of Savannah, Georgia, this dissertation addresses the evolution ...
The primary result of this study is to offer conclusive evidence in support of the contention that t...
Freedom did not solve the problems of the Proctor family. Nor did money, recognition, or powerful su...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
Eighteenth-century Methodist evangelism supported, perpetuated, and promoted slavery as requisite fo...
This dissertation is a narrative history about nearly 800 newly freed black Georgians who sought fre...
From 1735 to 1751, the Board of Trustees of the Province of Georgia imposed the only ban on slavery ...
In 1702 a New Haven mulatto, born to an enslaved black mother and a free white father, sued for free...
History, for any generation of historians, will be different from the history written by earlier gen...
This dissertation explores the relationship between Virginia’s early development and the transatlant...
Despite local histories that have been published on the history of Columbus, Georgia, and its school...
This dissertation explores the development of slavery in Massachusetts, including the influence of P...
A 1735 law banned slavery in the new English colony of Georgia. The colony\u27s Trustees considered ...
Whether through legal assault, private manumissions or slave revolt, the institution of slavery weat...
Conceived primarily as a case study of Savannah, Georgia, this dissertation addresses the evolution ...
The primary result of this study is to offer conclusive evidence in support of the contention that t...
Freedom did not solve the problems of the Proctor family. Nor did money, recognition, or powerful su...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
Eighteenth-century Methodist evangelism supported, perpetuated, and promoted slavery as requisite fo...
This dissertation is a narrative history about nearly 800 newly freed black Georgians who sought fre...
From 1735 to 1751, the Board of Trustees of the Province of Georgia imposed the only ban on slavery ...
In 1702 a New Haven mulatto, born to an enslaved black mother and a free white father, sued for free...
History, for any generation of historians, will be different from the history written by earlier gen...
This dissertation explores the relationship between Virginia’s early development and the transatlant...
Despite local histories that have been published on the history of Columbus, Georgia, and its school...
This dissertation explores the development of slavery in Massachusetts, including the influence of P...