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Published October 12, 2017 | Submitted
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White Servitude and the Growth of Black Slavery in Colonial America

Abstract

The role of white servitude evolved in a similar way during the course of the American colonial period in the West Indian and southern mainland colonies. The change from primary reliance on bound white labor to the use of slaves occurred in two steps, with an initial transition from servants to slaves in unskilled field work followed some time later by widespread training of blacks and substitution of slaves for servants in skilled occupations. The timing of the two steps can be understood as a function of the changing relative costs of indentured and slave labor in the markets for unskilled and skilled labor.

Additional Information

Space limitations necessitated the omission of many of the supporting materials of this paper. The argument and evidence summarized here have been presented more fully in David Walter Galenson, "The Indenture System and the Colonial Labor Market: An Economic History of White Servitude in Colonial British America," (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University 1979), a revised version of which was published as Galenson, David W. White Servitude in Colonial America: An Economic Analysis. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981, pp. v + 291.). I am grateful to Stanley Engerman for comments on an earlier draft of this paper. Published as Galenson, David W. "White servitude and the growth of black slavery in colonial America." The Journal of Economic History 41.1 (1981): 39-47.

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