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Actress
Harriot Lomax portrays 1770's house slave Lydia Broadnax at
Colonial Williamsburg. |
By
1770, there were a quarter-million African slaves in the 13 American
colonies, concentrated in the Chesapeake region. In "Bought
and Sold in Williamsburg," Alan visits a historic plantation,
Carter's Grove, at Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia. A quarter-mile
from the master's mansion stands a cluster of buildings built 12
years ago--an historically-accurate reconstruction of a typical
slave quarter, which housed slaves nine to a room. The reconstructions
were based on excavations by archeologist William
Kelso in the 1970s, the first-ever of American slave dwellings
and the start of a new understanding of slave life.
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in the last several decades have archeologists turned their
attention to uncovering and reconstructing slave quarters. |
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At
another plantation site now being excavated nearby, Marley
Brown, Colonial Williamsburg's Director of Archeology, and his
colleagues have found what has become a classic sign of slave dwellings--sub-floor
pits, probably used to protect hard-won belongings. The contents
of sub-floor pits found all over the Chesapeake paint a portrait
of slaves as poor people struggling to make the best of their harsh
and oppressive circumstances.
In
addition to personal items like West African beads and clay pipes
adorned with West African decorations, sub-floor pits have also
turned out to be rich in food remains. Written records document
that the standard weekly ration for an adult slave provided slightly
more than 2,000 calories a day--not enough to sustain a sunup-to-sundown
day of hard, manual labor.
By
separating out the tiniest pieces of seed and bone found in sub-floor
pits, archeologists have been able to document the reliance of slaves
on hunting and fishing to supplement the ration.
For
more on this topic, see the web feature:
These American Lives
Slave Housing at Monticello

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