Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

sheshe2

(83,898 posts)
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 02:49 PM Feb 2015

Black History | Breeding American Slaves

Slave breeding in the United States were those practices of slave ownership that aimed to influence the reproduction of slaves in order to increase the wealth of slaveholders.

snip


The purpose of slave breeding was to produce new slaves without incurring the cost of purchase, to fill labor shortages caused by the termination of the Atlantic slave trade, and to attempt to improve the health and productivity of slaves. Slave breeding was condoned in the South because slaves were considered to be subhuman chattel, and were not entitled to the same rights accorded to free persons.



For many enslaved African Americans, one of the cruelest hardships they endured was sexual abuse by the slave-holders, overseers, and other white men and women whose power to dominate them was complete. Enslaved women were forced to submit to their masters’ sexual advances, perhaps bearing children who would engender the rage of a master’s wife, and from whom they might be separated forever as a result. Masters forcibly paired “good breeders” to produce strong children they could sell at a high price. Resistance brought severe punishment, often death. “I know these facts will seem too awful to relate,” warns former slave William J. Anderson in his 1857 narrative, “. . . as they are some of the real ‘dark deeds of American Slavery.’”

snip



Charles Ball, a slave from Maryland, commented on a slave market that sold pregnant slaves. “The stranger, who was a thin, weather-beaten, sunburned figure, then said, he wanted a couple of breeding wenches, and would give as much for them as they would bring in Georgia. He then walked along our line, as we stood chained together, and looked at the whole of us – then turning to the women; asked the prices of the two pregnant ones. Our master replied, that these were two of the best breeding-wenches in all Maryland – that one was twenty-two, and the other only nineteen – that the first was already the mother of seven children, and the other of four – that he had himself seen the children at the time he bought their mothers – and that such wenches would be cheap at a thousand dollars each; but as they were not able to keep up with the gang, he would take twelve hundred dollars for the two.”





Young women were often advertised for sale as “good breeding stock“. To encourage child-bearing some population owners promised women slaves their freedom after they had produced fifteen children. One slave trader from Virginia boasted that his successful breeding policies enabled him to sell 6,000 slave children a year.

Read More; http://3chicspolitico.com/2015/02/14/black-history-breeding-american-slaves/

36 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Black History | Breeding American Slaves (Original Post) sheshe2 Feb 2015 OP
provocative as always guillaumeb Feb 2015 #1
Yes indeed... sheshe2 Feb 2015 #21
no thank you guillaumeb Feb 2015 #24
BET is premiering (in the US) a new enlightenment Feb 2015 #2
Thanks for this locks Feb 2015 #4
Enjoy! enlightenment Feb 2015 #25
That was on here in Canada already laundry_queen Feb 2015 #8
It's on my list. enlightenment Feb 2015 #12
And there is something that today's people who are descended from slave holders should find to be jwirr Feb 2015 #3
K&R right here. freshwest Feb 2015 #6
Don't you mean descendants of slave holders? nt raccoon Feb 2015 #33
Yes, I will try to change it but I don't know if I can this late. Thank you. It worked. jwirr Feb 2015 #34
This practice is IDENTICAL to the sexual & reproductive slavery the GOP/Tea Party promotes TODAY Triana Feb 2015 #5
jeezus h christ.....reading the OP was awful enough BlancheSplanchnik Feb 2015 #13
jeezus h christ is right Blanche! nt sheshe2 Feb 2015 #20
Exactly right. nt SunSeeker Feb 2015 #15
I thought Margaret Atwood's book guillaumeb Feb 2015 #27
Today's GOP consider it an instruction manual it seems.. Triana Feb 2015 #28
what is scary is the total disconnect between the GOP guillaumeb Feb 2015 #30
Jimmy Carter's book... Triana Feb 2015 #31
Thank you. I will read it. guillaumeb Feb 2015 #32
K&R ismnotwasm Feb 2015 #7
slavery, Jim Crow ... the president was so RIGHT in his speech the other week napkinz Feb 2015 #9
^^^ I agree with you and the president. salin Feb 2015 #11
Obama's measured but truthful statement is firing up more hatred from the plantation owners now. freshwest Feb 2015 #17
I certainly hope we do awaken in time, freshwest. nt sheshe2 Feb 2015 #19
K&r LiberalLoner Feb 2015 #10
We must never forget or sugarcoat. Thanks for the post. nt SunSeeker Feb 2015 #14
For further reading on the awful things that people did GeoWilliam750 Feb 2015 #16
Thank you for the recommendation sheshe2 Feb 2015 #18
The cruelty driven by greed Ilsa Feb 2015 #22
I have ALWAYS considered this assault on black women to be an attack on LIFE itself! Keep on, She! freshwest Feb 2015 #23
Attack on life itself sheshe2 Feb 2015 #26
When people's mercuryblues Feb 2015 #29
I teach rural white kids. LWolf Feb 2015 #35
thanks for the story guillaumeb Feb 2015 #36

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
1. provocative as always
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:04 PM
Feb 2015

would love to see how the Confederate apologists, the people who romanticize the Southern culture, the would be Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara types would reconcile the hideous reality of these photos and testimony with their Disney-type fantasy.

Whenever they have their reenactments why do they not have KKK re-enactors also? Maybe they could burn some crosses.

Oh I forgot, we are beyond racism in America.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
24. no thank you
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 06:04 PM
Feb 2015

for reminding that a picture is truly worth 1,000 words. The picture is so shocking. An act of love/nurturing turned into something horrible is true pornography.

enlightenment

(8,830 posts)
2. BET is premiering (in the US) a new
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:05 PM
Feb 2015

miniseries tomorrow - The Book of Negroes, based on the book of the same name by Lawrence Hill. It looks fabulous and I'm sad I don't have cable and will have to wait to see it.

http://www.bet.com/shows/the-book-of-negroes.html

laundry_queen

(8,646 posts)
8. That was on here in Canada already
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:43 PM
Feb 2015

I watched the whole thing, it was great. Hopefully you'll find a way to see it soon.

enlightenment

(8,830 posts)
12. It's on my list.
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 04:07 PM
Feb 2015

I may have to wait for it to show up streaming - since it is a CBC production, it may show up on AcornTV before too long. I've got my fingers crossed.

jwirr

(39,215 posts)
3. And there is something that today's people who are descended from slave holders should find to be
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:10 PM
Feb 2015

Last edited Mon Feb 16, 2015, 11:28 AM - Edit history (1)

proud of today? What in God's name are we arguing about - the slave holders were criminals that anyone would be crazy to honor. And I think if I look at my family tree I will find a few of that description. I at least have the good sense to be ashamed of them - to deny their acts against other human beings.

 

Triana

(22,666 posts)
5. This practice is IDENTICAL to the sexual & reproductive slavery the GOP/Tea Party promotes TODAY
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:31 PM
Feb 2015

for US women. They see no problem with rape and are constantly excusing and attempting to redefine it and always blame women for it. And besides forced sex, they insist on forced pregnancy and birth - no matter how or why it comes about.

There is NO difference in the way these slaves were viewed by their masters/owners and the manner in which Republicans view women TODAY. NONE.

“Virginia, the birthplace of the slave breeding industry in America, is debating state-sanctioned rape. Imagine the woman who says No to this as a prerequisite for abortion. Will she be strapped down, her ankles shackled to stir-ups?”

“I suspect,” said I, “that partisans would say, ‘If she doesn’t agree, she is free to leave.’?”

“Right, which means she is coerced into childbearing or coerced into taking other measures to terminate her pregnancy, which may or may not be safe. Or she relents and says Yes, and that’s by coercion, too.”

“Scratch at modern life and there’s a little slave era just below the surface, so we’re right back to your argument.”

Pamela Bridgewater’s argument, expressed over the past several years in articles and forums, and at the heart of a book in final revision called Breeding a Nation: Reproductive Slavery and the Pursuit of Freedom, presents the most compelling conceptual and constitutional frame I know for considering women’s bodily integrity and defending it from the right.


LINK: http://www.thenation.com/article/166961/reproductive-rights-and-long-hand-slave-breeding

BlancheSplanchnik

(20,219 posts)
13. jeezus h christ.....reading the OP was awful enough
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 04:21 PM
Feb 2015

Bodily integrity....reproductive slavery.....
I'm speechless.....especially at the sparse response to this, typical here and elsewhere.

Too sickening.....I'm speechless right now.

 

Triana

(22,666 posts)
28. Today's GOP consider it an instruction manual it seems..
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 06:17 PM
Feb 2015

...rather than a cautionary tale.

They cannot see women as human - deserving of human rights - and say the things they do - or advocate for the things they do. They are as much for sexual and reproductive slavery for today's women as the slavemasters were then. I can find few differences except that today's women aren't sold on an open market for breeding purposes (though sex trafficking is rampant). Instead, they live in a world with males who would force them into sexual and reproductive slavery and who openly advocate for that, making their indifference to women as humans with human rights particularly visible and particularly blatant.

At best we're political toys for them to use in their power games. At worst, we're the same 'breed stock' the slaves were. But - human? WOMEN? To a Republican? NO. Anything but that.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
30. what is scary is the total disconnect between the GOP
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 07:35 PM
Feb 2015

claiming to represent the "traditional Christian values" that they claim the country is founded on even while they discard the essential message of Christianity. They love the parts about women obeying males, love the parts about chastisement, probably secretly love the fornicating and begetting that goes on, but totally forget the parts about "easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle..." because they are too busy stealing.

Speaking as a man, if I deny a woman's rights how can I not deny my own? Human rights are human rights no matter the color or sex. Seems obvious.

There was a book "Men are from Mars, women are from Venus". maybe we need a new book: "Republicans are from the Land that Time forgot".

napkinz

(17,199 posts)
9. slavery, Jim Crow ... the president was so RIGHT in his speech the other week
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:53 PM
Feb 2015

the horrors this country still hasn't come to terms with

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
17. Obama's measured but truthful statement is firing up more hatred from the plantation owners now.
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 05:19 PM
Feb 2015

They are desperately trying to hold on and mold us to accept their way of thinking through media and political grifters. Will we awaken in time?

GeoWilliam750

(2,522 posts)
16. For further reading on the awful things that people did
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 05:15 PM
Feb 2015

I can recommend, "Slaves, Salt, Sex & Mr Crenshaw". It is about the reverse underground railroad in Illinois, kidnapping free blacks for sale into slavery. Whilst not the easiest read, it is instructive nevertheless. Anyone who thinks that slavery was not an atrocity is sick, and reading about slavery in the original "legal" documents in the South is heartbreaking.



sheshe2

(83,898 posts)
18. Thank you for the recommendation
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 05:33 PM
Feb 2015

So noted, I will look for it.

Anyone who thinks that slavery was not an atrocity is sick,


You are so correct, GeoWilliam.

Ilsa

(61,698 posts)
22. The cruelty driven by greed
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 05:48 PM
Feb 2015

is an abomination the US will have to contend with for centuries. A people cannot allow an injustice of this degree to transpire without having issues bred into its DNA for generations.

And yet, it feels like they've gotten away with it, and will continue getting away with it on an even larger scale, until we change our nation's priorities.

sheshe2

(83,898 posts)
26. Attack on life itself
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 06:07 PM
Feb 2015
One slave trader from Virginia boasted that his successful breeding policies enabled him to sell 6,000 slave children a year.


it sure was freshwest.

mercuryblues

(14,537 posts)
29. When people's
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 07:08 PM
Feb 2015

only knowledge of slavery comes from a chapter in a Social Studies book in the 7th Grade and watching Gone With the Wind, is it any wonder they think slaves were happy because they sang?

They refuse to acknowledge things like this not because it gives them a sad. Because to truly acknowledge the systemic abuse that has been heaped on AfAm diminishes their ownself worth. If they can say well, I grew up poor and had it no better than blacks look where I am now!! Blacks are just {fill in the blank} if they can't get to where I am. They refuse to accept that slavery, Jim Crow, redlining etc. had a negative impact on a whole race for centuries and still do because that makes their achievements don't seem so special. They grew up without being sent to substandard schools, only allowed to live in certain areas, parents able to get bank loans at a lower rate all solely based on their skin color. Sure they achieved on their own, but at least they did not start out with their feet nailed to the floor and told walk.

LWolf

(46,179 posts)
35. I teach rural white kids.
Mon Feb 16, 2015, 12:12 PM
Feb 2015

They think they know what racism is, and they think it's wrong. They don't really understand the depths of racism, though; they have no frame of reference. Generally, the only black people they've met in person are those who have been adopted into white families, and come with white culture. Locally, it has seemed to me that skin color isn't a factor for most, as long as the darker-skinned person is "a Christian." Or a rap star or an athlete, of course.

There are some exceptions, of course. Like the two boys who stood before my large 30 year-old poster of Whoopi reading a book and advocating reading, taking turns touching it and saying "nigger" and giggling. That simply opened up an opportunity for counseling for them and communication with their parents, who, regardless of their private views, were angry with the boys.

When I explain this particular aspect of slavery to my 8th graders, I generally get a profound silence as they try to process this information. Then I remind them that, in their teens, if they were slaves, they would have been breeding stock, as well. That gets an explosion, and generally opens the door for a deeper exploration of institutionalized racism, and the ways in which the ideals of freedom and equality have played out, and have not, in the U.S..

I can only hope that they will take something forward into the people they are becoming. Opening the minds and hearts of those who live in a closed, narrow culture is tricky.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
36. thanks for the story
Mon Feb 16, 2015, 03:52 PM
Feb 2015

and what a great way to teach by having the student become the concept being introduced by having them imagine being a person who is/was affected by the situation.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Black History »