Page 8 - Debates on the Slave Trade
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the slightest infraction. In addition, slaves are made to feel like
              unthinking machines and are forced to work relentlessly most of
              their waking hours. Northup describes typical demands made on
              slaves who pick cotton. The workers, he says, “are required to
              be in the cotton fi eld as soon as it is light in the morning, and,
                                          with the exception of ten or fi fteen
                                          minutes, which is given them at noon
            “[The field slaves] are       to swallow their allowance of cold
            not permitted to be a         bacon, they are not permitted to be
            moment idle until it is       a moment idle until it is too dark to
            too dark to see.” 34          see.”  If a slave fails to pick the daily
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                                          quota of cotton, Northup adds, the
            —Former slave Solomon Northup  person is whipped until blood soaks
                                          his or her clothes.



                      The Pitiless Breakup of Slave Families

              Abolitionists rightly focus on such cruelties. Yet they are even more
              angered by what one writer has called “the greatest perceived sin
              of American slavery.” It is, he says, the fact that many slavehold-
              ers have “undermined the same family structure that [they] simul-
              taneously encouraged.”  On the one hand, these slave owners
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              push their adult slaves to have children. Later, however, they often
              sell those children or the parents. The results are the same: fami-
              lies are torn asunder, and most members of those families never
              see one another again.
                 Northup witnessed such a family tragedy in New Orleans,
              where a man bought a female slave but showed no interest in
              purchasing her young daughter. Northup recalled that the girl was


                 sensible of some impending danger, instinctively fas-
                 tened her hands around her mother’s neck, and nestled
                 her  little  head  upon  her  bosom.  [The  seller]  sternly  or-
                 dered [the mother] to be quiet, but she did not heed him.
                 He caught her by the arm and pulled her rudely, but she



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