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Dayana M3lanni3

List of passengers on the Mayflower - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • Bradford, William
    • alexy velasco
       
      William Bradford was the one that did the book that told about the Pilgrims.
  • Dorothy (May) Bradford
    • alexy velasco
       
      This is William Bradfords wife. She died on the ship when it was in port. They had a child together.
  • Carver, John
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Allerton, Isaac Mary (Norris) Allerton, wife (Newbury, Berkshire)[1] Bartholomew Allerton, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Remember Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands) Mary Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands), the last survivor of the Mayflower company New International Encyclopedia Bradford, William (Austerfield, Yorkshire) Dorothy (May) Bradford, wife (Wisbech, Cambridgeshire) Brewster, William (Doncaster, Yorkshire) Mary Brewster, wife Love Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Wrestling Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Carver, John Catherine (Leggett) (White) Carver, wife (probably Sturton-le-Steeple, Nottinghamshire) Chilton, James (Canterbury)[2] Mrs. Susanna Chilton, wife Mary Chilton, daughter (Sandwich, Kent) Cooke, Francis John Cooke, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Cooper, Humility - (probably Leiden, Netherlands) baby daughter of Robert Cooper, in company of her aunt Ann Cooper Tilley, wife of Edward Tilley[3] Crackstone, John (Stratford St. Mary, Suffolk) John Crackstone, son Fletcher, Moses (probably Canterbury, Kent) Fuller, Edward (Redenhall, Norfolk)[2] Mrs. Edward Fuller, wife Samuel Fuller, son Fuller, Samuel (Redenhall, Norfolk), (brother to Edward) Goodman, John Minter, Desire (Norwich, Norfolk) Priest, Degory Rogers, Thomas (Watford, Northamptonshire) Joseph Rogers, son (Watford, Northamptonshire) Sampson, Henry (Henlow, Bedfordshire) child in company of his uncle and aunt Edward and Ann Tilley[3] Tilley, Edward (Henlow, Bedfordshire) Ann (Cooper) Tilley (Henlow, Bedfordshire) wife of Edward and aunt of Humilty Cooper and Henry Sampson Tilley, John (Henlow, Bedfordshire) Joan (Hurst) (Rogers) Tilley, wife (Henlow, Bedfordshire) Elizabeth Tilley, daughter (Henlow, Bedfordshire) Tinker, Thomas Mrs. Thomas Tinker, wife boy Tinker, son Turner, John boy Turner, son boy Turner, younger son White, William Susanna (Unknown) White , wife Resolved White, son Peregrine White, son (born in Provincetown Harbor) Williams, Thomas, (Great Yarmouth, Norfolk) Winslow, Edward (Droitwich, Worcestershire) Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow, wife
  • Leiden Congregation and Families
  • Planters recruited by London merchants Billington, John (possibly Spalding, Lincolnshire) Eleanor Billington, wife John Billington, son Francis Billington, son Britteridge, Richard Browne, Peter (Dorking, Surrey) Clarke, Richard Eaton, Francis (Bristol, Avon (historic: Somerset)) Sarah Eaton, wife Samuel Eaton, son Gardiner, Richard (Harwich, Essex) Hopkins, Stephen (Upper Clatford, Hampshire) Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins, wife Giles Hopkins, son by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire) Constance Hopkins, daughter by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire) Damaris Hopkins, daughter Oceanus Hopkins, born en route Margesson, Edmund Martin, Christopher (Billericay, Essex) Mary (Prower) Martin, wife Mullins, William (Dorking, Surrey) Alice Mullins, wife Priscilla Mullins, daughter Joseph Mullins, son Prower, Solomon (Billericay, Essex) Rigsdale, John Alice Rigsdale, wife Standish, Myles (Chorley, Lancashire) Rose Standish, wife Warren, Richard (Hertford, England) Winslow, Gilbert (Droitwich, Worcestershire), brother to "Pilgrim" Edward Winslow but not known to have lived in Leiden. [edit] Men hired to stay one year Alden, John (Harwich, Essex) - considered a ship's crewman (he was the ship's cooper) but joined settlers Allerton, John, was listed as a hired man but was apparently related to one of the Pilgrim families onboard, Isaac Allerton's, who all came from Leiden. He sailed in order to settle in North America, and was to return to England to help the rest of the group immigrate, but died during the first winter of the Pilgrims' settlement. He may have been a relative of the "Pilgrim" Allerton family.[4] Ely, Richard, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up but later returned to New England and died there. He is mentioned briefly as a sailor by name of Ely in "Of Plymouth Plantation." English, Thomas, hired to master a shallop but died in the winter Trevore, William, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up [edit] Family servants Thirteen of the 18 people in this category were attached to Pilgrim families, the other five were attached to Non-Pilgrim families. Butten, William, age: "a youth", servant of Samuel Fuller, only person who died during the voyage Carter, Robert, age unknown, servant or apprentice to William Mullins, shoemaker. --?--, Dorothy, maidservant of John Carver. Doty, Edward, (possibly Lincolnshire) age probably about 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins Holbeck, William, age likely under 21, servant to William White Hooke, John, (probably Norwich, Norfolk) age 13, apprenticed to Isaac Allerton Howland, John (probably Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire), age about 21, manservant for Governor John Carver Lancemore, John (probably Shropshire or Worcestershire), age under 21, servant to the Christopher Martin Latham, William, age 11, servant/apprentice to the John Carver family Leister, Edward (Kensington), aged over 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins Moore, Ellen, (Shipton, Shropshire), age 8, indentured to Edward Winslow Jasper More, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 7, indentured to John Carver Richard, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 6, indentured to William Brewster Mary, (Shipton, Shropshire), sister, age 4, indentured to William Brewster Soule, George, servant or employee of Edward Winslow Story, Elias, age under 21, in the care of Edward Winslow Thompson, Edward, age under 21, in the care of the William White family, first passenger to die after the Mayflower reached Cape Cod. Wilder, Roger, age under 21, servant in the John Carver family
  • In all, there were 102 passengers on the Mayflower - 74 men and 28 women
    • alexy velasco
       
      This was including the people thatvwas on the Speedwell in the first place.
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    Do you know how many people exactly were on the mayflower?
Malik Rodgers

Indentured servant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    An indentured servant was a laborer under contract to an employer for a fixed period of time, typically three to seven years, in exchange for their transportation, food, clothing, lodging and other necessities. Unlike slaves, an indentured servant was required to work only for a limited term specified in a signed contract. By: MALIK RODGERS
daniel cruz

Slavery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 9 views

    • giovanni belletti
       
      The slaves carry and plant tobaco
    • giovanni belletti
       
      The Dutch, French, an the Spanish made a lot of money selling slaves to each other
    • Cesar Monterroso
       
      They also collected cotton from the fields feeding there masters and carrying for any kids that there. The lived in small one room huts. The slept on hay beds along with maybe 7 more people squished together. The Master usually have 100's of slaves per farm.
    • Rafael Rivera
       
      The Slaves were also sold for tabaco . Becuase tabaco was like money back then .
    • anibal hernandez
       
      Slaves in the time of George Washington's time were treated with no respect. the slaves would get sold for tobacco and money.also even when the black people were free they would still have to respect all the white people because they weren't treated the same as other free citizens.like there was a woman named Francis and she was a free African American that wasn't treated the same as the whites she would go to court for thingts she would do and wipe her. then she went to court again and they made her become a slave for 10 years. then her owner told her if he dies she was free but that didn't happen to her. the slave owner died and she went back to court because they didn't believe her so the family of the died slave owner got the slave to work for them for the rest of there life.
    • christopher salinas
       
      the slaves also harvested rice. they grew a lot of rice
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      the slaves showed the british on how to make rice
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      some people were agianst slaves but still owned for example john adams and george washington.
  • Slavery (also called thralldom) is a form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others.
    • alexy velasco
       
      America was one of the last to end slavery. It took 200 years to do this.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      If a woman gives birth to a child and she is free then the child will automatically be free also but if she is not the child must remain a slave
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      american was one of the last country to end slavery it toook over 200 years for this to happen
  • debt-slavery
    • alexy velasco
       
      People that worked for this kind of slavery were known as indentured servants. Indentured servants were mostly white. They were also treated better than any of the other slaves. They could have their freedom after the time they promised to the specific person is over.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      The indentured servants would work for 7 years and after that they were free .
    • Geselle Valera
       
      if they werent indentured slaves they had to work till they died indentured slaves were mostly white.
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  • the birth of slave children to slaves
    • alexy velasco
       
      This rule was a little different. It is known that if the mother of the children was a slve then the children were slaves too. But if the mother is free then the children are free too.
    • Janelly Rodriguez
       
      it did not matter if the father was free because if the mother was a slave soa were the children
    • Geselle Valera
       
      the white men had sex whith african slaves and if they had children the children had to be slaves till the mom was free
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      Blacks taken from africa are oiled and said across then traded. After that process they are forced to work for the slave owners and traded again for tabacco.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      during the voyage of transporting the slaves to the new world almost 50% died coming over here
    • Jarred Green
       
      many slaves dided while coming to america, they were force captured from africa
  • legal for an owner to kill a slave
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      The slave owners are aloud to kill their slave sif they felt that they arent diong what is asked of them. Its mainly towards africa slaves.
    • Geselle Valera
       
      the black slaves had no rights and had to do exactly what they were told to do and if they didnt the owners would kill them or beat them
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      All slave owners are aloud to kill their slaves due to them running away and disobeying the orders. This abuse is mainly towards the blacks.
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      Many slave owners have africa sex slaves. Their job is to produce and work for the master and if the mother is free the child is free too.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      Even the natives had slaves espiecially the cherokee indians
    • Ashley Torres
       
      Many of the blacks were abused because of their behavior.
    • Samuel Melendez
       
      South Carolina had the most slaves than any other collony
    • Janaisha Torres
       
      The Washington and Jefferson Family had slaves. But didnt treat them the way other people treated slaves
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      slaves owners were allowed to kill their slaves for, disobaying or running away this usally happend to the blacks. this was really unfair
    • Samuel Melendez
       
      The Americans would trow the dead african bodys to the Atlantic sea.The americans later then got disturbed because of the bodys going to the shore.
  • form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others
  • of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others.
  • Approximately 10–20% of the rural population of Carolingian Europe consisted of slaves
    • anibal hernandez
       
      slaves were big part of the population of many other places then europe. in america there were atleast 250000 slaves in america in the 1750's.
  • Slavery (also called thralldom ) is a form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others . Slaves can be held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase or birth, and deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to demand wages.
    • Jarred Green
       
      they were held against there will and had very few rights
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      if a slave had a baby their baby was a slave also
    • alize mcghee
       
      thier was one slavery person that was under the militia that  the gost made . 
    • alize mcghee
       
       if an woman that was a slave had an slave that baby she had would automaticley me an slave as well 
    • alize mcghee
       
      all of the slaves wanted freedom 
    • alize mcghee
       
      they did not get treated same as the whites did 
  • By this definition there are approximately 27 million slaves in the world today, more than at any point in history and more than twice as many as all African slaves who survived being taken to the Americas in the Atlantic slave trade.[2][3][4]
  • the birth of slave children to slaves
  • Slavery was prominent presumably elsewhere in Africa long before the beginnings of the transatlantic slave trade.[69
  • Slavery in the United States
  • Slavery has existed, in one form or another, through the whole of recorded human history — as have, in various periods, movements to free large or distinct groups of slaves.
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    (this link is going to tell you everything about slaves .
  • ...3 more comments...
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    SOme Indians were slaves but they were topowerfull
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    Tabbaco is what made the slave owners so rich they would sell a young slave for 200 pounds of tabbaco
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    slaves yeah they were bad lolL
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    Slaves were not people (metaphorically speaking). They were property. They were treated like animals. Their masters would often whip them as a lesson of discipline.
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    slaves had no rights at all basically they were property to the white people they could not even vouch for there selves in the court of law
Matthew Dumbrique

South Carolina Colony - 0 views

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    The South Carolina Colony had the biggest slave population than any other colony of that time. There were more slaves and indentured servants than there were white sin South Carolina.
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    The South Carolina Colony had the biggest slave population than any other colony of that time. There were more slaves and indentured servants than there were white sin South Carolina.
Matthew Dumbrique

Atlantic Creole - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Atlantic Creole
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      Atlantic Creoles were indentured servants who came from Africa.
Matthew Dumbrique

The difference between the European and African slave trades - by Frances Stanford - He... - 0 views

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    This is about slave trades. All this article is about is how Europeans would trade African slaves. Check it out.
daniel cruz

Slavery in the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 3 views

  • Slavery in the United States lasted as a legal institution until the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865. It had its origins with the first English colonization of North America in Virginia in 1607, although African slaves were brought to Spanish Florida as early as the 1560s.[1] Most slaves were black and were held by whites, although some Native Americans and free blacks also held slaves; there was a small number of white slaves as well.[citation needed] Slaves were spread to the areas where there was good quality soil for large plantations of high value cash crops, such as cotton, sugar, and coffee. The majority of slaveholders were in the southern United States, where most slaves were engaged in an efficient machine-like gang system of agriculture, with farms of fifteen or more slaves proving to be far more productive than farms without slaves.[citation needed] Also, these large groups of slaves were thought to work more efficiently if guarded by a managerial class called overseers to ensure that the slaves did not waste a second of movement. From 1654 until 1865, slavery for life was legal within the boundaries of much of the present United States.[2] Before the widespread establishment of chattel slavery (outright ownership of the slave), much labor was organized under a system of bonded labor known as indentured servitude. This typically lasted for several years for white and black alike, and it was a means of using labor to pay the costs of transporting people to the colonies.[3] By the 18th century, court rulings established the racial basis of the American incarnation of slavery to apply chiefly to Black Africans and people of African descent, and occasionally to Native Americans. In part because of the success of tobacco as a cash crop in the Southern colonies, its labor-intensive character caused planters to import more slaves for labor by the end of the 17th century than did the northern colonies. The South had a significantly high number and proportion of slaves in the population.[3] Twelve million Africans were shipped to the Americas from the 16th to the 19th centuries.[4][5] Of these, an estimated 645,000 were brought to what is now the United States. The largest number were shipped to Brazil (see slavery in Brazil).[6] The slave population in the United States had grown to four million by the 1860 Census.[7] Slavery was one of the principal issues leading to the American Civil War. After the Union prevailed in the war, slavery was abolished throughout the United States with the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.[8]
  • Slavery in the United States
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      Most of the slaves were African Americans. The masters theat they worked for called them negores. They would be bought and sold like they were property. This was very diffficult for blacks to deal with for 200 years.
    • kenny rosario
       
      If they didnt do there job they would get whipped mulitiple times until the blood ouze out and ended with a splash of salt water
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      They would whip any black slave that either didn't listen to their masters ot did something to make them mad. Francis was a indentured servant who was snetenced to 30 whips. But not only Francis got whipped, possibly many other Africna sprobably got whipped even more!
    • Justin Rodriguez
       
      francis also has gotten a bigger punishment because some time later she got prgenate by her owner so not only did she get the whip punishment i think she was sent to life in being a slave i dont really know what happend to her baby though ( she was raped by her owner and they punished her instead of her owner thats quite messed up )
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  • Women's rights
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      Back in the time of George Washington, women had no rights like the African men did. They were "reproducting tools" to whites. They would engage in sexual intercourse with men to produce more slaves, sort of like a business. If they didn't have sex with other African men, they were raped by their masters and most of the time it didn't turn out good for them because her rapist was white. Whites had more rights.
  • Slave Trade
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      The Spanish, The Dutch, and The Portugese were the top slave sellers. They bought slaves like they were candy from a store. The slaves they bought, traded, and/or sold had to plant tobacco, which was very much like money. They would trade slaves for tabacco, vice-versa.
  • Free blacks
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      Free blacks, were not completely free, only half free. They only had certain rights such as having their own farm, panting their own crops, and exploring.
    • Matthew Dumbrique
       
      Emmanuel was an identured servant. He lost his wife and kids and would NEVER see them again because thy were slaves.
  • African slaves were brought to Spanish Florida as early as the 1560s
    • christopher salinas
       
      They were brought in ships to the U.S from Africa. They were crwoded in the ships. A lot of them died in the ship and when they died people threw them to the sea.
  • Most slaves were black and were held by whites,
  • Slaves were punished with a variety of objects and instruments. Some of these included: whips, placed in chains and shackles, various contraptions such as metal collars, being hanged, and even forced to walk a treadmill
  • The Whip was the most common form of punishment performed on a slave
  • Most slaves were African and were held by Europeans
  • there was a small number of white slaves as well
  • An animation showing when United States territories and states forbade or allowed slavery, 1789-1861
    • Samuel Melendez
       
      black people were treated worst after the constetution
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    Slavery in the United States lasted as a legal institution until the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865
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    Slavery in the United States
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    slavery was a wrong thing because human being were treated like they were not humans because of their skin color
Malik Rodgers

File:Slaves in chains (grayscale).png - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Three Abyssinian slaves in chains. The Anti-Slavery Society estimated there were 2 million slaves in Ethiopia in the early 1930s out of an estimated population of between 8 and 16 million By: MALIK RODGERS
Malik Rodgers

File:Msiri's kingdom in 1880 760x460 lo-res.jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Southern Central Africa in 1880 By: MALIK RODGERS
Malik Rodgers

File:Indenturecertificate.jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Indenture certificate signed with an X by Henry Meyer in 1738 By: MALIK RODGERS
Janelly Rodriguez

Atlantic slave trade - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

    • Janelly Rodriguez
       
      the english treated the slaves worse than the dutch treated them
  • Most enslaved people were shipped from West Africa and Central Africa and taken to North and South America
  • labor on sugar, coffee, cocoa and cotton plantations, in gold and silver mines, in rice fields, or in houses to work as servants
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  • The slave trade is sometimes called the Maafa by African and African-American scholars, meaning "holocaust" or "great disaster" in Swahili.
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