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A house that the slaves stopped at?

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Anonymous

14y ago
Updated: 8/16/2019

the underground railroad.

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Wiki User

14y ago

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Who looked after owners house and family on southern plantations?

House slaves looked after the owners house and family on Southern plantations. House slaves were selected from the most well-behaved of the field slaves. House slaves cooked the meals, cleaned the house, did the laundry, and looked after the children.


The place where the slaves stopped for the night was called the station?

true


What is slaves housing?

A safe house is a house that slaves are safe in. An abolitionists usually owned the house and slaves knew it was a safe house by a light in the window! <There were other ways but that was the main one.>


Did viking slaves sleep inside the owner's long house?

The Vikings had slaves. The slaves slept in the owner's house on the floor.


What did slaves call a safe house?

Slaves called a safe house on the Underground Railroad a "station" or a "depot."


What was different between house and field slaves?

House slaves were treated better than field slaves. Field slaves were worked hard by a (usually cruel) overseer, while house slaves worked inside, out of the heat, under a normally slightly kinder person.


What does house slaves do in Africa?

House slaves duties are cooking, cleaning, serving meals and caring for children daily.


What is slave safe house?

A safe house is a house that slaves are safe in. An abolitionists usually owned the house and slaves knew it was a safe house by a light in the window! <There were other ways but that was the main one.>


What stopped Full House?

It was cancelled.


How was slavery stopped in the 1700's and the 1800's?

It wasn't stopped until after the civil war. Even with the civil war amendments former slaves were still treated as slaves and denied civil rights with the Jim Crow laws.


What house did slaves stop at?

any abolitionist's house they could


How was the life of the house slaves the same as the field slaves?

House slaves and field slaves both experienced harsh living conditions, long hours of labor, and physical punishment. However, house slaves often had slightly better living conditions and more interaction with their masters, while field slaves typically faced harder physical labor and were subject to harsher discipline.