No not at the time she was learning how to read and write.
In some places yes. The Northern states allowed blacks a free life. In the South it was considered "illegal" for blacks to learn or write.
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No, she did not learn how to read or write because none of the slaves were allowed to be taught in case they used it for communication to escape.
It was illegal for slaves to be educated. However, many slaves found ways to become educated without their masters knowing. Some masters were kind, to some degree, and allowed their slaves to learn. Those slaves taught other slaves.
It depends on what time period and location you mean. Some were encouraged to do so.A slave was allowed to learn as much as his master needed him to know.Giving slaves too much education was discouraged, as uneducated slaves were easier to control.
they were in horrible condition. they lived in shacks, were beaten, wipped, and were treated worst than the dogs. They were not allowed to learn how to read or write.
Assuming that the slaves were owned by American masters, they were forced to learn English.
Slaves in the South were not allowed to learn to read or write, gather in groups without supervision, or leave their owner's property without permission. They also were prohibited from owning property, carrying weapons, or testifying in court against a white person.
in the kitchen
The postbellum United States was a very unfriendly place for freed slaves. Many Freed slaves actually stayed on their plantations (where they were certainly not educated) due to the difficultly of finding employment in an incredibly prejudiced society and the relative sercuity they had on a plantation. Of those slaves that did leave the plantations many moved to cites where they became the urban poor. In short aside from isolated attempts from the Freedmen's Bureau(established by the radical republicans and almost as quickly abolished by the consecrative Andrew Johnson) freed slaves were not educated
Because if they did learn, they learn how to rebel. then the might rebel and escape.
In many historical societies where slavery existed, slaves were often prohibited from learning to read and write as a means of maintaining control and power over them. However, there were some instances where slaves managed to acquire these skills in secret or through clandestine means.