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Slave Market
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Everyone is well aware that the practice of slavery went on for a large portion of the United States history, but few know the extent to which the slave market developed and flourished in the lower southern states in order to meet farmers’ demand for slaves. The slave trade was an extremely profitable business that was responsible for a large portion of the immense wealth that characterized the Deep South during the antebellum period. ... Slaves had been traded long before the slave trade actually became a booming business, but it was not until the 1820’s that it became a recognizable slave market (Soul By Soul, 6). ...
In order for this industry to work, there had to be slave traders of course. Slave traders were seen as the scum of the earth, even to those whole owned slaves. Slaveholders believed themselves to be greater than slave traders. One example of such a belief is Daniel Hundley’s observations about the slave trader. Hundley states “the slave trader is not troubled evidently with conscience, for although he habitually separates parent from child, brother from sister, and husband from wife, he is yet one of the jolliest dogs alive” (Soul By Soul, 7). The reality of the issue is that slaveholders like Hundley were a great deal to blame for slavery as well as the market. It was the plantation owners that created the demand for the slaves in the first place, and it was they that were more than content to buy and sell slaves by way of the slave market in order to make a penny.
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Paper Information
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Title: Slave Market
Words: 1207 Rating: None Pages: 4.8 submitted by: dweiss1
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