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The Indian Slave Trade: The Rise of the English Empire in the American South, 1670-1717.


By Alan Gallay (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. xviii plus 444 pp.).

Drawing on English, Spanish, and French sources, Alan Gallay has written a superb book on the Indian slave trade slave trade

Capturing, selling, and buying of slaves. Slavery has existed throughout the world from ancient times, and trading in slaves has been equally universal. Slaves were taken from the Slavs and Iranians from antiquity to the 19th century, from the sub-Saharan
 that played a central role in the emergence of South Carolina's economy and political relations while shaping the character of its people. Not since Verner Crane's The Southern Frontier, 1670-1732, published seventy-four years ago, have we had such a detailed and insightful account of the horrific series of Indian wars that engulfed the lower southern colonies in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Gallay reckons that the colonizing South Carolinians enslaved Enslaved may refer to:
  • Slavery, the socio-economic condition of being owned and worked by and for someone else
  • Submissive (BDSM), people playing the 'slave' part in BDSM
  • Enslaved (band), a progressive black metal/Viking metal band from Haugesund, Norway
 and exported thirty to fifty thousand Native Americans between 1670 and 1720. Putting this into perspective, he notes that the Carolinians shipped more Indians from Charleston, to be sold in New England, the Caribbean, and other places than they imported Africans through the South's premier seaport. This is not a case of genocide, which occurs when policy makers schedule a subject people for extinction. Rather, it is a case of grisly behavior by profit-minded Englishmen unrestrained by religion, moral values, or government.

South Carolina's colonial pioneers march onto the stage Gallay recreates as a particularly vicious, self-aggrandizing breed. "No other mainland English colony," he writes, "endured such a long period dominated by an incorrigible in·cor·ri·gi·ble  
adj.
1. Incapable of being corrected or reformed: an incorrigible criminal.

2. Firmly rooted; ineradicable: incorrigible faults.

3.
 and politically corrupt elite"(p. 3). By the end of the seventeenth century, the colony "was out of control"--oblivious to the desires of the home government to stop the pernicious policy of fomenting Indian wars in order to obtain more Indian slaves. He suggests that it was this "singular history and political culture" that produced the rabid fire-eater proslavery pro·slav·er·y  
adj.
Advocating the practice of slavery.
 advocates and nullifiers Nullifiers were believers in states' rights. They supported the position of the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, holding that States could nullify federal laws within their borders. See also
  • List of political parties in the United States
 150 years later.

Gallay makes only passing comparisons between the Indian relations that developed in Virginia and South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, but it is implicit in this finely researched book that Carolina's geographic position necessarily thrust it into a tri-cornered competition with Spanish Florida and French Louisiana that intensified the Indian slave trade. Absent this imperial struggle, white South Carolinians probably wouldn't have had the self-restraint to eschew the profits to be made by making war on native peoples; nonetheless, the Anglo-French-Spanish competition heightened the incentive for waging war against tribal peoples because attacking tribes allied with the Spanish and French was a key way of defeating the French and Spanish themselves.

Gallay is not romantic about native peoples of the Southeast region. He makes tribal involvement in the enslavement en·slave  
tr.v. en·slaved, en·slav·ing, en·slaves
To make into or as if into a slave.



en·slavement n.
 of indigenous peoples a sub-theme of this important book. The parallel is striking between the swelling African slave trade
This article discusses systems of slavery within Africa, the history and effects of the slavery trade upon Africa. And also Maafa. See Atlantic slave trade for the trans-Atlantic trade, and Arab slave trade for the Trans-Saharan trade.
, where one tribal society made war on another in order to send slave coffles westward to the awaiting ships on the east side of the Atlantic, and the Indian slave trade where one Indian society made war on another in order to send slaves eastward to the awaiting ships on the west side of the Atlantic. Nor is Gallay romantic about the Spanish and French as colonizers more kindly disposed toward native peoples. Although the French and Spanish tried to stop the wars of Indian enslavement fomented by English colonizers and their Indian allies, it was for them largely a matter of trying to save their own Indian allies upon whom their own survival depended. In all, Gallay presents us with what must be the ugliest story to be told about inhumanity in·hu·man·i·ty  
n. pl. in·hu·man·i·ties
1. Lack of pity or compassion.

2. An inhuman or cruel act.


inhumanity
Noun

pl -ties

1.
 and naked pursuit of self-interest in the colonial period of North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 history.

What became of the thousands of Indians shipped from Charleston to distant point where they would find it almost impossible to escape and return to their native lands? Gallay has been unable to find sources that even indicate how many Indian slaves clambered off ships in the port towns of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania. We know that they arrived in these northern locations only because New England and middle Atlantic colonies began legislating against the importation of Indian slaves after the Tuscarora War of 1711 and because enslaved Indians end up in the wills and inventories of estate of deceased northern colonists. An account of the fate of the exported Indian slaves must await another historian. Gallay's inability to shed much light on this topic does not detract from this valuable book, which in any event was constructed as a study of how European and Indian societies rose and fell in the half-century after the arrival of white Carolinian settlers.

Gary B. Nash

University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising.  
COPYRIGHT 2003 Journal of Social History
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Nash, Gary B.
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 22, 2003
Words:747
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