African slavery began in North America in 1619 at Jamestown, Virginia. The first American-built slave ship, Desire, launched from Massachusetts in 1636, beginning the slave trade between Britain’s American colonies and Africa (History …show more content…
They would also refuse to eat, rather than allow themselves to be taken to an unknown land and live a life of bondage. Some groups of slaves aboard the ships managed to revolt and overpower the crew (Haskins 4). The most famous shipboard slave revolt was in 1839 on the Spanish slave ship, Amistad, bound for Cuba. Fifty-three Africans seized the ship and ordered a handful of crewmen to sail back to Africa, but the sailors tricked the Africans and sailed to the coast of North America (Haskins 5). Bringing slaves directly to from Africa was illegal in the United States by 1839 and some Americans believed that the Africans of the Amistad should’ve been allowed to return to their homeland (Haskins 5). John Quincy Adams, a former president of the United States, represented the Africans in a case that went all the way to the United States Supreme Court, which ruled that the men should be allowed to go free (Haskins …show more content…
There was a general feeling that slavery would gradually pass away. Improvements in technology—the cotton gin and sewing machine—increased the demand for slave labor, however, in order to produce more cotton in Southern states (History Net 1). By the 1830s, many Southerners had shifted from, “Slavery is a necessary evil,” and to “Slavery is a positive good.” The institution existed because it was “God’s will,” a Christian duty to lift the African out of brutality while still using control over his “animal passions” (History Net