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By Deanna Barker, Frontier Resources |
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One half to two thirds of all immigrants to Colonial America arrived as indentured servants. At times, as many as 75% of the population of some colonies were under terms of indenture. Even on the frontier, according to the 1790 U.S. Census, 6% of the Kentucky population was indentured. Citizens of the colonies would deal with indenture on a daily basis. My intent is to give the reenactor or interpreter some of the background about working beside, owning or having been an indentured servant. This was a labor system, not a system of apprenticeship. (Galenson, 6) The historic basis for indenture grew out of English agricultural servitude and began because of labor shortages in England and in the colonies. It developed at a time when England had a great number of people being displaced from farming. This led to an early growth of the indentured labor system. The importation of white servants under contracts known as indentures proved more profitable as a short-term labor source than enslaving Indians or using free labor. Eventually, the final attempt to ease labor shortages was enslavement of Africans. Wherever you find slavery, you first find indentures. A labor-intensive cash crop
such as tobacco required a large work force. The earliest indentured
servants were brought to Virginia as farm laborers. The importance of
indenture can be seen in Virginia, where in 1618 the colony offered
a headright, a grant of 50 acres per servant, as an incentive
to planters to import more servants from England. The headright became
the property of the owner, not the servant. (Galenson, 12) According
to Galenson, "the basic elements of the system were in use by the
Virginia Company by 1620, and may have been worked out earlier ..."(3) Bibliography: Fredrick M. Binder & David M. Reimers. The way we lived: Essays and Documents in American Social History, Vol. 1; 1607-1877. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath & Co., 1992. Phyllis Cunnington; Costume of Household Servants from the Middle Ages to 1900. London, UK; Harper and Row Publishers, Inc., 1974. Joseph Doddridge; Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars. Parsons, WV: McClain Printing Co., 1996. David W. Galson; White Servatude in Colonial America: An Economic Analysis. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1981. W. Preston Haynie (Ed.) Northumberland County Virginia Records of Indentured Servants 1650-1795. Heritage Books, Inc., 1996. Peter Kolchin. American Slavery 1619-1877. New York, NY: Hill and Wang, 1993. Abbot Emerson Smith; Colonists in Bondage: White Servitude and Convict Labor in America, 1607-1776. Chapel Hill, NC.: University of North Carolina, 1947. Warren B. Smith: White Servitude in Colonial South Carolina. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1961. Charles Woodmason; Journal of C.W. Clerk. |
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Questions
or comments about CILH, contact an officer
in your area.
March 10, 2004 |
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