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Mr. Sedivy's
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Highlands Ranch High School - Mr. Sedivy
Colonial Development Why Did They Bring Slaves?
Tobacco was so valuable that Walter Raleigh once bet Queen Elizabeth that he could weigh the smoke itself. First he weighed the tobacco leaves, then put them in his pipe, smoked it, and subtracted the weight of the ashes from the original weight of the leaves. The difference was the weight of the smoke, according to Walter Raleigh.
A slaver sometimes took two months to sell a cargo. By 1740, there were 40,000 African slaves in South Carolina.
Bound in iron cuffs at the wrist and ankle, slaves were tightlty packed below deck in tiers of platforms two- to three-feet high. The women and children remained unchained in separate compartments. Many slaves, desperate about being taken from their homeland, friends, and families, tried to kill their keepers. Some committed suicide by starving themselves or by jumping overboard. Slaves were fed twice daily on meals of horsebeans, yams, and rice. If they refused to eat, they were force-fed with a funnel. An unbalanced diet, lack of fresh air, and unsanitary conditions caused widespread diseases including: scurvy, dysentery, malaria, measles, and smallpox. About 9.5 million slaves survived the Atlantic journey between the 16th and 19th centuries. Colonial America American Colonies: Problems and War in Colonial America The Stamp Act and Sugar Act, The American Revolution The Declaration of Independence The Turning Point of the American Revolution End of the American Revolution - Yorktown / Treaty of Paris Benedict Arnold and His Pal, John André Articles of Confederation, Constitution, the Bill of Rights Historical Periods of | Prehistory
| Mesopotamia & Phoenicians |
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Highlands Ranch High School 9375 South Cresthill Lane Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80126 303-471-7000
Mr. Sedivy's History Classes
| Colorado History | American
Government | Modern European History | Advanced
Placement European History | Rise of England
| World History |
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