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If she let the slave go back the plantation owners would most likely torture him\her into revealing the location of the Underground Railways. This is why she always carried a gun, but never used it.
i would say in the backcontrys
6%. So about 480,000. Of those, only 15% had more than one. Slaves at that time cost about what a modern luxury car would cost today and there was no guarantee they would work, so they were mainly held by large plantation owners.
They were taken to slave auctions were they would then be sold to white people usually plantation owners.
a tobacco field on a large plantation
Virginia, Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia were reliant on cash crops.
Building a new road in the wilderness would most likely be supported by a Southern plantation owner in the early 1800s.
Building a new road in the wilderness would most likely be supported by a Southern plantation owner in the early 1800s.
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The small farmer from New Jersey is more likely to have moved to the Northwest Territory, simply because of geography.
That would be Tara.
One of the main reasons a slave would not leave a plantation because it would have no where to go, another reason is if a slave is found and it had no tag or permission the person could kidnap the slave as it's own or they would sell it off again.
enslaved people who were forced to work on the plantation. The wealthy family would oversee the operations of the plantation, while skilled workers, such as carpenters and blacksmiths, would carry out various tasks. Enslaved people would perform the majority of the labor, working in the fields, tending to crops, and contributing to the overall economic success of the plantation.
Parallelism would most likely be found in an American realist play.
it would be found in an almanac
What would mos likely be the predominant life form found in sttage