Emancipation Proclamation Influence on African American Music

Forced migration was long before the day all slaves had been hoping for, January 1, 1863 the day that the Emancipation Proclamation was enforced.   From this day forward the African Americans started changing and influencing the world like never before, starting with their own music.   .   A slave is a person who is the property of and wholly subject to another; a bond servant[1].   There were two kinds of slave’s indentured slaves and slaves.   There was a little difference between the two kinds of slavery. Indentured slaves had a bill and they did work to work off their bill.   They basically did the same work as the other slaves, but they got paid for their work.   It was not money directly handed to the indentured slaves.   Whomever they worked for would just take it off their bill.   The slave would eventually work forever because their owner would only take a little a time.   They took off just a little so they could keep the slave for a long time.   Most indentured slaves died still owing debt to whomever they worked for at the time.   Indentured slaves were before slavery.

The other kinds of slaves were primarily from Africa.   That is where they lived.   The slaves were taken against their will.   Being taken against your will is considered kidnapping.   The people would kidnap the Africans while they were doing chores or come to their homes at nightfall and get them.   It did not matter if they were young, old, boy, girl, big or small, they still would take them.   The Africans were usually beaten first and then taken.   The people even set traps for the Africans to get caught[2].

The process of slaves being sold and traded was called the slave route.   The slave routes were usually traveled through Portugal, Spain and England.   The trade was similar to a triangle so they named it the triangle trade.   The slaves were traded for many different items.   They were sold for different amounts of money.   More... [continues]

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