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Teacher Resources : Enewsletters : E-Newsletter, January 31, 2007
Colonial Williamsburg Teacher Gazette
January 31, 2007Volume 5, Issue 6
Primary Source of the Month

Virginia Gazette (Purdie and Dixon), May 2, 1766.

Virginia Gazette (Purdie and Dixon), May 2, 1766.


CONTENTS

"The Master's Mercy: Slave Prosecutions and Punishments in York County, Virginia, 1700 to 1780"

Primary Source of the Month

Teaching Strategy

Colonial Williamsburg Teaching Resources

Teaching News

Quotation of the Month


The next
Electronic Field Trip is

The Slave Trade EFT
The Slave Trade
February 15, 2007



2006-2007 Teaching
Resources Catalog

2006-2007  Teaching Resources Catalog




PSCU Financial Services Logo

2006–2007 Electronic Field
Trip Scholarships



Kids Zone: History, Games & Fun
Games, activities, and resources about life in colonial America

TOP STORIES
"The Master's Mercy: Slave Prosecutions and Punishments in York County, Virginia, 1700 to 1780"
by Anne Willis

Eighteenth-century Virginia slave laws encoded the contradiction that enslaved people were both chattel property to be bought, sold while at the same time they were held to be persons responsible for any criminal behavior in which they might engage. The Virginia slave code took away slaves' independence while simultaneously empowering their owners.

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Primary Source of the Month:
Virginia Gazette Runaway Advertisement

By the 1760s, Virginia law contained harsh penalties for slaves who broke the law. Today, these laws would be considered extremely cruel and racist. At the time, however, Virginia lawmakers viewed such laws as necessary. This runaway advertisement is one of thousands that appeared in the Virginia Gazette during the eighteenth century.

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Teaching Strategy: Virginia Slave Laws

In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the colony of Virginia experienced a drastic population shift. In 1685 there were 2,600 documented African Americans in Virginia. By 1775, the number of slaves had increased to 186,400, or approximately 40 percent of the population of the colony. In this lesson, students will examine a selection of slave statutes, or laws, that were enacted in Virginia to control the growing slave population.

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Colonial Williamsburg Teaching Resources for Your Classroom

Colonial Williamsburg offers a variety of quality instructional materials dealing with 18th-century life, including:

  • Hands-On History: Slave's Bag (object kit)
  • Slavery: A Colonial Odyssey (lesson unit)
  • Caesar's Story: 1759 (book)
  • Enslaved (video and online materials)
  • Stories Under African Skies (CD)
  • From Ear to Ear (CD)

Learn More


Teaching News

Amazing Grace, which opens in theaters February 23, 2007, is based on the true story of William Wilberforce, a British statesman and reformer from the early part of the 19th century. This feature film chronicles his extraordinary contributions to the world, primarily his 20-year fight to abolish the British slave trade, which he won in 1807. Wilberforce was also instrumental in passing legislation to abolish slavery in the British colonies, a victory he won just three days before his death in 1833.

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Quotation of the Month

"Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally."

—Abraham Lincoln, speech to the
140th Indiana regiment, March 17, 1865


For more information about Colonial Williamsburg teaching resources, visit our Internet site at: http://www.history.org/teach

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