Chapter 13 SS
Task System
A system of slave labor under which a slave had to complete a specific assignment/individual tasks
gang-labor system
A system of work discipline used on southern cotton plantations in the mid-nineteenth century in which white overseers or black drivers supervised gangs of enslaved laborers to achieve greater productivity.
Georgia and South Carolina
states where task system of labor took place
passive resistance
thorough maintaining their own religious beliefs and practices. Worked slower to protest hours in the fields. Ran away for a couple of days to avoid an angry slaveholder.
Slaveholders view of slavery
viewed slaves as property, not as people
Length of task system
worked 8-10 a day
gang labor system length of labor
year round labor, six days a week
Solomon Northup
A free black man who was captured and sold to slavery in Louisiana for 12 years.
Nat Turner's Rebellion
Rebellion in which Nat Turner led a group of slaves through Virginia in an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow and kill planter families in 1831.
active resistance
Slave uprisings. Relatively rare, based on the number of slaves. White southerns lived in fear of them.
Task System/Gang System
Task system(most common in rice culture)-slaves were assigned a particular task in the morning, and after completing the job, they were free for the rest of the day Gang system(more common)-slaves were divided into groups, compelled to work for as many hours as the overseer considered a reasonable workday
make a profit
reason slave holders bought and sold slaves
third gang
given lighter work
first gang
given the hardest work, fittest slave
Task System weather
hot and humid
overseer
led the gang labor system
second gang
less able slaves
public auction
most common method of sale of slaves
Three gangs
number of gangs that made up the gang system