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Slavery In Colonial Georgia, 1730–1775
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| #2412497 in Books | University of Georgia Press | 2007-12-01 | 2007-12-01 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 8.50 x.61 x5.50l,.76 | File type: PDF | 264 pages | ||0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.| Essential reading for anyone who would understand the origins of deep south slavery|By ebungalow|The Georgia colony was conceived slave-free. How and why that vision failed, and how the economic and social roots of 19th-century deep south slavery were set. I read this side-by-side with Peter Wood's "Black Majority," which treats colonial slavery in South Carolina.|||Based on a careful investigation of nearly all pertinent primary and secondary literature. Out of this vast amount of material, often apparently contradictory, Wood has constructed a very clear and convincing account of the emergence of slavery in Georgia. It
Georgia was the only British colony in America in which a sustained effort was made to prohibit the introduction and use of black slaves at a time when the institution of slavery was well established in the other southern colonies.
In the first half of Slavery in Colonial Georgia, Betty Wood examines the reasons which prompted James Oglethorpe and the other British founders of the colony to originally ban slavery. In their concern for the manners and mora...
You can specify the type of files you want, for your device.Slavery In Colonial Georgia, 1730–1775 | Betty Wood. I really enjoyed this book and have already told so many people about it!