Preview

DBQ Indentured Servitude

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
799 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
DBQ Indentured Servitude
Christian Kantner
11 February 2015
Mrs. Ring
WHAP
DBQ: Indentured Servitude
How did indentured servitude affect the world? Furthermore, how did the world affect indentured servitude? Causes of indentured servitude include a need for cheap labor, economic survival, and needs of the servants. Consequences include bad working/living conditions for the servants, a huge number of immigrants arriving at countries with plantations/factories, and many
Asian Indians leaving their countries. Documents 2, 1, and 7 can support those causes while documents 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, and 9 show the consequences. A helpful document would be an example of the requirements needed to qualify for a certificate of exemption from a servant’s master.
Document 7 shows how cheap labor was necessary and led to indentured servitude. In the document, there is a section titled “Monthly or Daily Wages or Task Work Rates.” The sections states that working adult men should be paid one shilling per day. In today’s US currency, that’s about 24 cents. The document also states that workers are expected to work 6 days a week, for 7 to 10 hours each day. This shows that the need for cheap labor persisted long after slavery was in decline. As shown by Document 2, some countries employed indentured servants merely to stay afloat. In the document, an excerpt from a newspaper in South Africa, it is explained that the workforce needed to support the 60,000 acres of sugar plantations well exceeds the workforce

that can be provided from the country itself. Because of this, the country of Itongati presumably bought and employed thousands of indentured servants, contributing to the rise of servitude.
Document 1 illustrates the British Undersecratary’s view of the system as well as another cause of indentured servitude: the needs of the indentured. In Document 1, it is stated that indentured servants are not “slaves, seized by violence, brought over in fetters, and working under the lash.” This

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Although the indentured servants were led by a desire to better their conditions, they were treated more like slaves in their new country. “…They are not slaves, seized by violence, brought over in fetters, and working under the lash. They have been raised, not without effort, like recruits for the military service” [D1]. Herman…

    • 808 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The massive demand and supply of the sugar industry required a massive work force to maintain and farm the sugar. On one small island there is 60,000 acres of sugar cultivation, alone. The high need was accommodated by document 3, which showed a large migration of indentured servants to small islands and many other places where manual labor was needed. Document 4 showed the data of document 3 in a table. Mauritius’ need for a massive amount labor was met by the high amount (455,000) of immigrant indentured labor to the island. In document 1, a British secretary attempts to explain the amount of servants by comparing them to slaves. He states that they are not working under the “lash” or working due to force; they are being paid and are being raised. Many are being trained in a way he compared to the…

    • 599 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Age and Income, length of labor(hrs), return to work (wk), number of hours working per week.…

    • 973 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indentured servitude and slavery existed in the ‘New World’ primarily for economic and population growth. In the book, Going to the Source, Slavery was defined as “hereditary” and “a lifetime status” and the slave must serve for life, however, on the other hand indentured servitude was “contractual” and “voluntary” although the servant is forced to serve for a fixed amount of years. Indentured servitude and slavery are strikingly parallel to each other from the fact that both parties participate in physically demanding labor and endure severe punishments induced by their master, nevertheless, the contractual agreement to each party is quite different, plus the primary skin color of the of party heavily impacts the treatment and escape punishments…

    • 269 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indentured Servitude DBQ

    • 856 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Document three shows the beginnings of indentured servitude, in a way. This document, a map, shows where all the indentured servants came from, with the two most prominent locations being China and India. Most of them ended up somewhere in the Caribbean, likely to raise cash crops like sugar. There is also a noticeable lack of indentured servants from European countries. This may be due to Europeans being the main ones who hired these servants, and they may not have had their fellow countrymen sign such a contract. It also may be due to racism; all the countries are either Asian or African, places where whites would be few and far between. Document four supports these ideas, with the only origin points the document notes are China, India, and Japan, with over a million indentured servants flowing into the Americas (or South Africa) in this time, most of whom came from India.…

    • 856 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The threat posed by the increasing number of indentured servants might have been one of the reasons this type of servitude diminished. (Dictionary of American History, 2013) Another reason for the decline of indentures servants what that many farmers and plantation owners began to rely on the labor of enslaved Africans. Slaves were more costly than servants, but they served for life and by the 1660s colonial legislative assemblies had legalized lifelong slavery (Tindall & Shi, 2013,…

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indented servitude was a system that created by the British, in which poor white were able to be transported and employed in the “new world” now known as America. This system enabled both whites and blacks who arrived on ships to America to serve their masters for a certain amount of years, in hope that one day they will earn their freedom, earn some wealth, and acquire some land from their masters to start their own lives. This system seemed to work for everyone, but begin to shift slowly overtime for several reasons. The first reason for the shift in indented servitude to slavery was because indented servants began to rebel against masters; the rebellion stroke fear among slave-owners who were reluctant to recruit indented servants to avoid any chances of rebellion. As indented servants declined in numbers, due to rebellion, the regrowth of England’s economy, the slave trade in Africa began to bloom and slowly but eventually more and more…

    • 925 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ¨The employer tacks on $25 per day to the debt to cover those expenses.¨( End Slavery ) The prison bus is like the ship that the slaves were taken on. People get kidnaped and sold or rape everyday.¨While working and unable to leave, this worker needs a shelter, food and water.¨Trafficked men, women and children are typically taken to brothels, escort services, massage parlors, strip clubs or hotels and are prostituted on the streets or forced to participate in pornography.¨”( End Slavery ) Forced labor is the type of enslavement used across the world to produce many products in our global supply chains.Domestic servitude can also be a form of bonded labor. This form of slavery happens when migrant workers reach a destination country, and they incur a debt for their travel and/or a recruitment fee. The fishing, textile, construction, mineral and agriculture industries are particularly laced with forced laborers. The private economy – businesses and individuals seeking to create a profit – exploits 90% of the world’s forced laborers, They just want to gain profit that motivates the force behind the institution of slavery. The consequences of live-in help can create unique vulnerabilities for victims. Domestic workplaces are connected to off-duty living quarters and often not shared with other workers. Such an environment…

    • 997 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indentured Slavery Essay

    • 577 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Americas and Africa saw a shift from slavery and other forms of work to indentured servitude. In many instances, this influx of imported men and women more than doubled the native population. An increasing agricultural necessity and potential, as well as the falling out of slavery caused a drastic increase in the practice of indentured servitude which disrupted native lands and harmed imported workers.…

    • 577 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In parable of the sower I did see some themes of indentured servitude mentioned. On page. 36, Lauren introduces a man Richard Moss who has “put together his own religion” and “claims that god wants man to be patriarchs, rulers and protectors of women and father as many children as possible”. Which she goes on to explain how he has a great job as an engineer for a water company. Then we find out that Richard Moss, likes to pick up homeless women to live with him and be a part of polygamous…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In reality, Indentured servitude is not so far off of slavery, “In practice, indentured servants were largely at the mercy of their masters, and the institution is widely regarded as having been only a few steps away from…

    • 1627 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indentured Servitude

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Company towns and indentured servitude are parts of American history that showcase the issues that can arise when human rights are violated and exploited for increased revenue. A simple explanation of the two practices would give away no intended malice— and sometimes, they did work the way they were intended— but more often the uglier side of human nature was revealed and the freedoms of the indentured servants and the employees of the company towns were threatened.…

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Indentured Servitude

    • 1215 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Indentured servitude began as a fairly successful way of gathering much needed help to come to the new world. One planter could not get wealthy, regardless of his work efforts, unless he had others to work his fields. This fact necessitated the need for an inexpensive source of labor. Many of the unemployed, homeless, poor and exiled men and women were offered a way to get a fresh start this way. These outcasts became commodities for wealthy merchants looking for cheap labor to bring to the new world. They were offered a trip to North America, along with four to seven years of unpaid work for…

    • 1215 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    1619 was a critical year in development. The House of Burgesses was created, but more importantly, the first slaves were brought into the colony of Jamestown, Virginia. Between the years of 1607-1770, slavery became a staple of the Southern American economy. Slaves were a chief source of labor making the treatment of the slaves and their role in American society change significantly. The reasons for the rise of their importance reflected in the economic, geographic, and political factors of the time.…

    • 691 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this article, the servants as seen as an essential tool for their success, only valuing them for their own benefit. In addition, in Herman Merivale’s excerpt, Document 1, he explains that the indentured servants are not slaves, but are raised like recruits for the military service. Both documents enforce the constant necessity for workers in countries like South America, North America and Britain. Further notion of the significance that indentured servitude had on the Americas could be obtained by government statistics on the economy in the Americas before and after the years of indentured servitude.…

    • 875 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays