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Map of the Americas and Africa showing the origin, routes, and destinations demonstrating the heaviest volume of trafficking was split between South America and the Caribbean.

African Slavery in Colonial British North America

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African Slavery in Colonial British North America

Directly or indirectly, the economies of all 13 British colonies in North America depended on slavery. By the 1620s, the labor-intensive cultivation of tobacco for European markets was established in Virginia, with white indentured servants performing most of the heavy labor. Before 1660 only a fraction of Virginia planters held slaves. By 1675 slavery was well established, and by 1700 slaves had almost entirely replaced indentured servants. With plentiful land and slave labor available to grow a lucrative crop, southern planters prospered, and family-based tobacco plantations became the economic and social norm.

Africans in British North America

Among the first documented Africans in British North America were approximately 20 men and women who arrived at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619. They were captives, likely from the kingdom of Ndongo in present-day Angola. Privateers had seized them from a slave ship bound for Mexico and traded them in Virginia. The Africans worked the tobacco fields in Jamestown alongside white indentured servants, but it is not clear if they were considered slaves.

By 1700 there were 27,817 enslaved Africans in British North America. In 1740, there were 150,024. By 1770, the number of slaves had grown to 462,000, about one-fifth of the total colonial population.

Animation by Slate Magazine, 2015

The Atlantic Slave Trade in Two Minutes

Settlement in the Virginia Piedmont

Around 1720, after English immigrants had claimed the land along Virginia’s navigable rivers and within the coastal plain, colonial settlement spread west toward the Blue Ridge. In the 1730s, Thomas Jefferson’s father, Peter, became one of the first settlers in what later became Albemarle County. There he established the tobacco plantation that he called Shadwell and his son would call Monticello. Through Peter Jefferson and other early settlers, the slave-based plantation culture of the Tidewater region extended ever westward and became further entrenched in colonial American life, as the Atlantic slave trade expanded.

Map of Virginia showing the fall line between the state's coastal and piedmont regions that runs north to south from Washington DC through Richmond and down into North Carolina.
Virginia, Coastal Plain and Piedmont, showing the fall line

Inheriting Slavery - The World of Peter, Jane, and Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson inherited his father’s plantation, slaves, and livelihood. Peter Jefferson was a planter, surveyor, county justice, member of the colonial Virginia legislature, and a loyal citizen of the British Empire. Jefferson’s mother, Jane Randolph Jefferson, belonged to one of the colony’s most prominent families.

The intellectual and material character of his parents’ household at Shadwell shaped Thomas Jefferson in childhood and young adulthood. Peter and Jane Jefferson owned books, scientific and drafting instruments, fashionable furniture and table wares, over 7,200 acres of land, and 60 slaves. At Shadwell the young Jefferson learned the customs of an elite, slaveholding society while developing a great curiosity about the wider world.

Narrated by Derek Wheeler, Research Archaeologist at Monticello

Shadwell, where it all started

The Chesapeake and the Atlantic World

The economy of the Chesapeake region was based on growing tobacco with slave labor, exporting it to Britain, and acquiring British goods in return. Elite colonial Americans were enthusiastic consumers of imported goods that signaled wealth, gentility, and status: carved hardwood furniture, Chinese porcelain, silk waistcoats, creamware teapots, silver spoons, books, works of art, and exotic foodstuffs such as tea, spices, and sugar. Along with goods, colonial elites acquired British cultural knowledge, such as familiarity with classical architecture, dining and tea-drinking rituals, and the art of polite conversation.

A large hall with columns, tall windows, with several tables laid out with porcelain and silver being examined by several people dressed in early 19th clothing.
St. James’s Square, London: Wedgwood and Byerley Showroom, York Street, 1809. Courtesy Guildhall Library, City of London/Bridgeman Art Library International

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Slavery at Monticello

Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings