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Objective: To examine the slave codes that existed in the antebellum South.

Objective: To examine the slave codes that existed in the antebellum South. Cotton Field, Oklahoma. Returning From The Field. Slavery in America.

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Objective: To examine the slave codes that existed in the antebellum South.

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  1. Objective: To examine the slave codes that existed in the antebellum South. Cotton Field, Oklahoma

  2. Returning From The Field Slavery in America The photo captures the physical and mental fatigue of a woman as she returns from a day's work in the field picking cotton. Her dress is as worn as her face, and though she is weary she is determined. Notice the woman's fatigue, the character of her face, her strong hands, the sturdy but much used shoe, and the beaten path she trods. • Most slaves worked as field hands on cotton plantations.

  3. Slaves were responsible for clearing land and planting and harvesting crops. An African-American woman is shown here balancing a basket of cotton on her head on a farm in Augusta, Georgia. (1870)

  4. This is a young African American child working in a cotton field. Although this photograph was taken after the end of slavery (1885) the plight of African Americans improved very little in the American South.

  5. Some slaves became skilled workers, such as carpenters or blacksmiths. The blacksmith was considered a skilled craftsman and therefore more valuable as a slave than field hands, which included women and young children.

  6. Former slave from coastal Georgia making a fishing net, early twentieth century

  7. Who's Dat Although this photo was taken in rural Alabama in the 1890s, thirty years after slavery's end, the artist hopes to show how individuals lived through slavery and emerged into freedom with their honor and humanity fully intact. Notice the clean clothes worn by the woman and child, the healthy…

  8. Who's Dat …and clean-looking puppy, the sturdy and well-used broom. Notice the fence. The ruts in the road. The tip of a cabin roof in the background. As with all of his images, the photo contrasts the difficulties of life for blacks in the rural South with the strength of theircharacters.

  9. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 • Capital crimes when punished with death. • The following shall be considered as capital offences, when committed by a slave or free person of color: • insurrection, or an attempt to excite it; • committing a rape, or attempting it on a free white female; • murder of a free white person, or murder of a slave or free person of color, or poisoning of a human being;

  10. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 3. Punishment for manslaughter. And in case a verdict of manslaughter shall be found by the jury, the punishment shall be by whipping, at the discretion of the court, and branded on the cheek with the letter M.

  11. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 4. Punishment of slaves for striking white persons …for the first offence suffer such punishment as the said justice or justices shall in his or their discretion think fit, not extending to life or limb; and for the second offence, suffer death: but in case any such slave shall grievously wound, maim , or bruise any white person, though it shall be only the first offence, such slave shall suffer death.

  12. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 10. Punishment for circulating incendiary documents. ..for the purpose of exciting to insurrection, conspiracy, or resistance among the slaves, Negroes, or free persons of color of this state, against their owners or the citizens of this state, the said person or persons offending against this section of this act, shall be punished with death.

  13. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 SEC.. II. MINOR OFFENCES. 11. Punishment for teaching slaves or free persons of color to read.…the said free person of color or slave shall be punished by fine and whipping, or fine or whipping, at the discretion of the court.

  14. Slave Codes of the State of Georgia, 1848 SEC.. II. MINOR OFFENCES. 14. Punishment of free persons of color for harboring slaves.All free persons of color within this state, who shall harbor, conceal, or entertain a slave or slaves who shall be charged or accused or any criminal matter, or shall be a runaway, shall, upon conviction (in addition to the penalty already provided for in said section), be subject to the same punishment as slaves are under said section of the above recited act.

  15. Slave Codes - laws meant to keep slaves from running away or rebelling Slave Code Examples: - Slaves could not gather in groups larger than three. - Slaves could not leave their owner's land without a written pass. - Slaves could not own guns. - It was illegal for slaves to learn how to read or write. - Slaves could not testify in court.

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