The slave trade : Slavery and color

audiobook

The slave trade : Slavery and color

by Theodore D. (Theodore Dehon) Jervey

EN·~9 hours·19 chapters

Chapters

19 total

INTRODUCTORY

2:19

CHAPTER I

30:10

CHAPTER II

20:24

CHAPTER III

24:07

CHAPTER IV

27:57

CHAPTER V

27:11

CHAPTER VI

20:45

CHAPTER VII

10:48

CHAPTER VIII

25:45

CHAPTER IX

1:29:16

Description

This work offers a measured, scholarly look at how the United States grappled with slavery and the broader “color question” as it evolved from a regional controversy into a global concern. Drawing on sixteen years of research, the author weaves together legal statutes, personal anecdotes, and public debates to map the shifting sectional loyalties that defined the nation’s early years. The narrative aims to present the facts plainly, inviting listeners to consider the roots of today’s discussions on race.

The book begins by examining early colonial attitudes, from a Massachusetts slave‑owner’s crude assertion of racial dominance in the 1630s to Maryland’s 1663 law punishing white women who married enslaved people. It also highlights contemporary commentaries, such as Stroud’s 1827 sketch of slave legislation, showing how legal language reinforced prejudice. By tracing these developments, the author seeks to clarify long‑standing misconceptions and illuminate how historical discourse on slavery continues to shape public opinion.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (531K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Columbia: The State Company, 1925.

Credits

Bob Taylor, Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2023-12-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

TD

Theodore D. (Theodore Dehon) Jervey

1859–1947

A Charleston lawyer and historian, this South Carolina writer turned his deep interest in the region’s past into biographies, local history, and fiction shaped by the politics of the post-Civil War South.

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