What role did family play in the lives of slaves?

What will be an ideal response?


Answer: The ideal answer should include:
1. Slaves had a strong and abiding sense of family and kinship.
2. On large plantations with relatively stable slave populations, most slave children lived in two- parent households.
3. Female-headed families were the norm for slaves who lived on farms or small plantations,
particularly in the Upper South.
4. The threat of breaking up a family through sale was a disciplinary tool that gave masters great power over their slaves.
5. Kinship and mutual obligation extended beyond the primary family and was not limited to blood relations.
6. Kinship provided a model for personal relationships and the basis for a sense of community.

History

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For many Americans, George Washington was __________

A) a symbol of the new government B) a routine, typical political leader C) not a popular leader D) a threat to proclaim himself king E) a good general, but not necessarily a good politician

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The economic effects of the Embargo Act were most keenly felt in:

a. the North. b. the West. c. the South. d. all sections of the country, which were seriously affected by it.

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The Vietnam War was the longest war in American history and the only military war that the United States has lost.

a. true b. false

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The Xiongnu Confederation grew out of which of the following?

A. pastoral nomads B. a group of nomadic merchants C. bands of foraging communities D. small farming settlements

History