This primary source is a text that came into fruition after Nat Turner was captured in 1831 in the Southampton county jail. This was where he was interviewed by a physician named Thomas R. Gray. Nat Turner led the only effective sustained slave rebellion in U.S History, setting terror throughout the white south Gray, in his foreword to Turner's Confessions, even states that "never did a band of savages do their work of death more sparingly," leading his revelation that such, in his opinion, mentally embryonic people could devise such a plot. In addition, description of the slaves as savages" further connects Native Americans and slaves.
Secondary source: abolition.nypl.org
The secondary source is from abolition.nypl.org. This website has many different credible text and articles about slavery and the abolition movement. The Abolition in the Slave Trade articles goes into how the abolition movement became one of the most reformed movements in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. The British was one of the most dominating country to enter the Atlantic slave trade system. The British carried more slaves into the new world and other countries. The effect of abolition effected the slave trade in the British colonies, but this did not mean it ended slavery completely. This did not free enslave slaves and it
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These sources mainly reinforced the thoughts about slavery. Slaves were considered less than human, and in turn were treated as such. Slave men and women and women had absolutely no rights . Their lifestyle was entirely dependent on their owner. They were considered "property". These sources made me think about today's world, my main "take away" seems to be that White Americans still seem to gain from the legacy of slavery, while Black Americans still suffer from it mental and socially in today's