Slaves were usually responsible for keeping their own living quarters clean. So it differed, but in most cases the answer would be 'fairly regularly'.
That would have been up to the individual slave and his (or her) desire for a clean cabin. Im not sure the answer but the above answer is incorrect.
U.S. political leaders, many of them slaveowners, reacted to the emergence of Haiti as a state borne out of a slave revolt with ambivalence, at times providing aid.
Many many times, often by killing slave owners who mistreated them. Slavers who used whips had their throats slit.
A slave owner can have as many slaves as they can afford to buy and support.
It greatly dramatised the slave issue, drawing it to the attention of many Northerners who had not felt strongly about it till then, and arousing enthusiasm for the Underground Railroad (the safe-house system for runaways).
That would have been up to the individual slave and his (or her) desire for a clean cabin. Im not sure the answer but the above answer is incorrect.
two
Every Week
alot
Slave trading was a business. Slave markets were in many places, like banks or stores, where ever customers would most likely buy a slave; right down town on main street. They were often cleaned and dressed to induce a better price.
twice a day!
people thought slave was badShocking thousands of people who previously had been unconcerned about slavery.
Author of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' - written in a fury after the passing of the Fugitive Slave Act which allowed official slave-catchers to hunt down runaways. The novel attracted many people to the Abolitionist movement.
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Ned Kelly and the cruel daysMaybe you mean Uncle Toms Cabin.This is from wikipedia:Uncle Tom's Cabin is dominated by a single theme: the evil and immorality of slavery.
In most cases, slave families were not kept together. Many times the husbands were separated from the wife and children.
The word 'slave' appears 1 time in the KJV Bible, in Jeremiah 2:14.