Because, quite simply, it was used all around the world as well: before 1800 it was just normal that slavery existed
Slavery was used in Massachusetts primarily for economic reasons, as it provided planters and businessmen with a cheap source of labor for agricultural and industrial activities. Additionally, slavery was supported and maintained by the legal system and societal norms that upheld the institution of slavery at the time.
In Massachusetts, slavery was less prevalent than in the southern states and the economy relied less on enslaved labor. Slaves in Massachusetts were more likely to work in households or on small farms, while in the South slavery was central to large-scale plantation agriculture. Massachusetts gradually abolished slavery starting in the late 18th century, while slavery persisted in the South until the Civil War.
Massachusetts became the first colony to legalize slavery in what would later become the United States in 1641.
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Yes, Massachusetts did have slavery in the colonial period and early years of statehood. The practice of slavery was abolished in the state through a series of judicial decisions and gradual emancipation laws in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Yes, Massachusetts recognized slavery as a legal institution until the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled in 1783, in the case of Brom and Bett v. Ashley, that slavery was inconsistent with the state's constitution and was therefore abolished. This decision effectively ended slavery in the state.
there is no slavery in massachusetts
Slavery in Massachusetts was created in 1854.
Massachusetts prohibited slavery in 1780
Georgia was the last colony to legalize slavery in 1798!
Massachusetts was the first U.S. state to abolish slavery, in a 1783 judicial interpretation of its 1780 constitution.
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they didnt
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