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Published on Nov 22, 2015
Southern Colonies
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1.
Southern Colonies
By: Cooper Hurn
Photo by
Balmain & Glebe Heritage
2.
Plantations & Small farms
Plantations were more like small villages than farms
Plantation owners needed slaves, because they were too big
Small farms usually grew their own food and didn't use slaves
In the backcountry, there were lots of small farms
Photo by
atxryan
3.
Family Life
The children of wealthy planters lived fairly easy lives
Parents hired tutors for kids
Boys learned to ride horses, fish, plant crops, hunt, etc.
Girls learned to cook, sew, sing, etc.
Backcountry farmers often lived far from the nearest town
Photo by
fikirbaz
4.
Southern Slavery
The importance of slavery changed over time
In early 1600s, indentured servants did much of the hard work
Slavery began to get popular when more plantations were built
In the 1600s to the 1700s, more and more slaves were brought over
In 1750, slaves worked in all of the colonies, but mostly in the South
Photo by
John T Pilot
5.
Life under slavery
Slaves weren't treated like humans
Bought and sold as property
Families were torn apart
Slaves got whipped and punished if not working
Never had any food, drinks, or good clothes to work in
Photo by
Funky Tee
6.
African american Culture
To survive harsh lives Africans formed "families" with their community
Another strength was religion
Africans created a culture that blended African and American custom
They remembered their past by telling stories from Africa
In South Carolina, enslaved Africans created a new language, (Gullah)
Photo by
warrenski
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