Difference between revisions of "HIST 131--Week 11 Questions/Comments"

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(James Henry Hammond, 1845 “Letter to an English Abolitionist”)
(Bennett Barrow’s Plantation Journal, May, 1838)
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I thought that this journal entry was quite interesting.  However, a few of the rules that were expressed seemed quite frivolous, and one was, "No negro shall be allowed to marry out of the plantation" (244).  While I understand that it would be problematic because it could result in the buying of a slave that a plantation owner may not want nor could afford, but was it really a common problem for men to want to marry women from other plantations?  If so, how did they meet these women?  I understand that one option could possibly be they were sold from one plantation to another, but if that were true, how would the two keep in touch, if the majority were illiterate?  Quincey Garcia
 
I thought that this journal entry was quite interesting.  However, a few of the rules that were expressed seemed quite frivolous, and one was, "No negro shall be allowed to marry out of the plantation" (244).  While I understand that it would be problematic because it could result in the buying of a slave that a plantation owner may not want nor could afford, but was it really a common problem for men to want to marry women from other plantations?  If so, how did they meet these women?  I understand that one option could possibly be they were sold from one plantation to another, but if that were true, how would the two keep in touch, if the majority were illiterate?  Quincey Garcia
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I noticed in the very begining of the article, Barrow talks about the Driver. Who is that? I also noticed that when he began his long paragraph on page 244, Barrow states that "[negro's] are always liable to my call without questioning for a moment." This means that the slaves need to be ready for him to call at any moment and they must come no matter what. I found it funny how in the remaining paragraph, he tries to justify that by saying things like if there is a fire, if the slaves are not at his beck and call, there could be serious losses. -Kristina Scrimshaw
  
 
== Nat Turner – from ''Confessions of Nat Turner'', 1831 ==
 
== Nat Turner – from ''Confessions of Nat Turner'', 1831 ==

Revision as of 04:32, 4 April 2008