Test Bank for The African-American Odyssey, Combined Volume, 7th Edition
Preview Extract
Chapter 2
Middle Passage ca. 1450โ1809
Multiple Choice
1. In the early 1400s, the __________ began to explore the coastline of Africa.
A) Portuguese
B) French
C) English
D) Dutch
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.1 Discuss how the arrival of the Europeans affected Africa.
Topic: 2.1 The European Age of Exploration and Colonization
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
2. Why did Portuguese sea captains explore the west coast of Africa in the fifteenth century?
A) They hoped to find previously unknown lands.
B) They were interested in making scientific discoveries.
C) They were interested in trade.
D) They were interested in establishing military outposts.
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.1 Discuss how the arrival of the Europeans affected Africa.
Topic: 2.1 The European Age of Exploration and Colonization
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
3. In 1487 __________ discovered the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa.
A) Bartolomeu Dias
B) Christopher Columbus
C) Vasco da Gama
D) Ferdinand Magellan
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.1 Discuss how the arrival of the Europeans affected Africa.
Topic: 2.1 The European Age of Exploration and Colonization
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
20
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4. Which of the following best characterizes the voyages of Christopher Columbus in the late
1400s?
A) Columbus reached India and Japan.
B) Columbus successfully sailed east to reach China.
C) Columbus proved that the earth was much smaller than most people believed.
D) Columbus made navigation mistakes that led to his accidental landfall in the Americas.
Answer: D
Learning Objective: Discuss how the arrival of the Europeans affected Africa.
Topic: 2.1 The European Age of Exploration and Colonization
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
5. When the Portuguese first arrived in West Africa, they were most interested in trading for
________.
A) gold
B) slaves
C) horses
D) weapons
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
6. In West Africa, __________ conducted the Islamic slave trade.
A) Arab missionaries
B) Sudanese horsemen
C) European merchants
D) Ottoman officials
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
21
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7. The Islamic slave trade in West Africa dealt mostly in __________.
A) prisoners of war
B) skilled craftsmen
C) young men of military age
D) women and children
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
8. Which of the following was a major component of the trans-Saharan trade?
A) silver
B) slaves
C) wheat
D) tobacco
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
9. In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Europeans usually acquired African slaves
__________.
A) from African traders
B) in Middle Eastern marketplaces
C) by right of conquest
D) as gifts from African leaders
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
22
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10. Who was the first known Portuguese merchant to have formally traded for slaves with the
Africans?
A) Antam Goncalvez
B) Oba Dahomey
C) Ruy do Siqueira
D) Bartolomeu Dias
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
11. Which of the following events was a major turning point in the West African slave trade with
Europeans?
A) the Hundred Yearsโ War in Europe
B) the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope
C) Columbusโs voyages
D) the Reformation in Europe
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
12. Which of the following created enormous demand for West African slaves in sixteenthcentury Brazil?
A) rice plantations
B) cotton plantations
C) tobacco plantations
D) sugar plantations
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
23
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13. The growth of the Atlantic slave trade was driven by demand for the products of the
Americas in __________.
A) Europe
B) North Africa
C) Asia
D) The Middle East
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.3 Evaluate the relationship between the Atlantic slave trade and the
Industrial Revolution.
Topic: 2.3 The Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
14. Portugal and __________ dominated the Atlantic slave trade during the sixteenth century.
A) the Netherlands
B) England
C) France
D) Spain
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.3 Evaluate the relationship between the Atlantic slave trade and the
Industrial Revolution.
Topic: 2.3 The Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
15. __________ dominated the Atlantic slave trade during the early seventeenth century.
A) Holland
B) England
C) France
D) Germany
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.3 Evaluate the relationship between the Atlantic slave trade and the
Industrial Revolution.
Topic: 2.3 The Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
24
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16. In what century did the English become the dominant power in the Atlantic slave trade?
A) sixteenth
B) seventeenth
C) eighteenth
D) nineteenth
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.3 Evaluate the relationship between the Atlantic slave trade and the
Industrial Revolution.
Topic: 2.3 The Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
17. Which of the following statements best describes the triangular trade system produced by the
Atlantic slave trade?
A) One part of the system entailed traders carrying African goods to Europe in exchange for
slaves, ivory, precious gemstones, and art works.
B) The middle part of the trade included traders carrying African slaves to the West Indies and
exchanging slaves for sugar.
C) Sugar was exported to Australia on the third leg of the triangle.
D) White Americans from Britainโs New England colonies were not involved in the trade.
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.3 Evaluate the relationship between the Atlantic slave trade and the
Industrial Revolution.
Topic: 2.3 The Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
18. The availability of large numbers of slaves in West Africa was a result of __________.
A) European intervention
B) migration
C) wars
D) poverty
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4 The African-American Ordeal from Capture to Destination
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
25
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19. Once captured Africans reached the coast, they were taken to fortified structures called
__________.
A) factories
B) dungeons
C) penitentiaries
D) markets
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4 The African-American Ordeal from Capture to Destination
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
20. Many captive Africans believed that the Europeans they encountered on the West African
coast were __________.
A) animals
B) ghosts
C) gods
D) cannibals
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4 The African-American Ordeal from Capture to Destination
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
21. Once at sea, slave ships travelled to the Canary Islands and from there to __________.
A) Virginia
B) New England
C) Spain
D) the West Indies
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.1 The Crossing
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
26
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22. How long did a typical crossing from Africa to the Americas take?
A) three to four weeks
B) four to six weeks
C) two to three months
D) three to five months
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.1 The Crossing
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
23. According to the standard formula, a slave ship could hold __________ slaves per ton.
A) two
B) six
C) ten
D) twenty
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.2 The Slavers and Their Technology
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
24. Which of the following contributed the most to the high mortality rates among slaves making
the crossing to the Americas?
A) unsanitary conditions
B) deliberate cruelty
C) mass suicides
D) inherent dangers in sea travel
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.2 The Slavers and Their Technology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
27
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25. Overall, roughly __________ of enslaved Africans died during the Middle Passage or during
โseasoningโ on a Caribbean island.
A) a quarter
B) a third
C) half
D) three-quarters
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.2 The Slavers and Their Technology
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
26. Which of the following is true of Olaudah Equiano?
A) Scholars believe that much of his account of the Middle Passage is unreliable.
B) He was the son of an African slave.
C) He was almost certainly born in Brazil.
D) Scholars respect the accuracy of his account of the Middle Passage.
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.3 A Slaveโs Story
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
27. Why did sailors on slavers string up nets on the sides of the ship?
A) to prevent pirates from boarding
B) to prevent slaves from jumping overboard
C) to catch fish
D) to make it easier to climb up into the masts
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.3 A Slaveโs Story
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
28
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28. Why did slave traders seek to separate enslaved Africans who spoke the same language?
A) to lessen the possibility of suicides
B) to increase their sense of hopelessness
C) to increase their sense of isolation
D) to lessen the possibility of shipboard conspiracies
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.3 A Slaveโs Story
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
29. John Newton began his involvement in the Atlantic slave trade as a(n) __________.
A) shipโs doctor
B) shipโs captain
C) ship owner
D) indentured servant
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.4 A Captainโs Story
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
30. Which of the following was true of John Newton?
A) He treated the slaves on his ships much better than most other captains did.
B) He opposed the slave trade from a very early age.
C) He claimed to have no religion except for profit.
D) He became a devout evangelical Christian.
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.4 A Captainโs Story
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
29
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31. How did John Newtonโs views on slavery change over time?
A) He supported slavery for most of his life but became a leading opponent of the slave trade in
his later years.
B) He opposed slavery when he was a young man but changed his mind after he became the
captain of a slave ship.
C) He was strong opponent of slavery his whole life.
D) He was strong supporter of slavery his whole life.
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.4 A Captainโs Story
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
32. During the voyage to the Americas, enslaved Africans were fed __________.
A) European foods
B) fish caught by the crew
C) African foods
D) bread and water
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.5 Provisions for the Middle Passage
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
33. Which of the following statements was true of the food supply for enslaved Africans aboard
a slaver?
A) The food on board was often insufficient to prevent malnutrition.
B) The food on board had plenty of calories but was not very nutritious.
C) The food on board was often better than the enslaved Africans had eaten previously.
D) The food on board was exclusively made up of products from the Americas.
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.5 Provisions for the Middle Passage
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
30
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34. Why did death rates aboard slavers drop after 1750?
A) New laws were passed governing conditions on slavers.
B) By then, shipsโ surgeons knew more about hygiene and diet.
C) The average size of slaver fell by 20 percent.
D) Demand for slaves fell in the Americas.
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.6 Sanitation, Disease, and Death
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
35. After 1750, vaccinations helped reduce the incidence of __________ on board slavers.
A) scurvy
B) yellow fever
C) smallpox
D) dysentery
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.6 Sanitation, Disease, and Death
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
36. What disease was known to slave crews as โbloody fluxโ?
A) smallpox
B) dysentery
C) yellow fever
D) measles
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.6 Sanitation, Disease, and Death
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
31
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37. Which of the following was true of shipsโ surgeons aboard slavers?
A) They dramatically reduced fatalities among slaves.
B) They were almost universally frauds.
C) They were paid by the hour for their services.
D) They were paid a bonus for slaves that survived the Middle Passage.
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.6 Sanitation, Disease, and Death
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
38. Most slave uprisings aboard slavers took place __________.
A) just as the ship was getting ready to leave the African coast
B) as the ship approached its destination
C) when the ship had been at sea for about a month
D) when the ship docked in the Americas
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.7 Resistance and Revolt at Sea
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
39. The journal kept by the Dutch slaver St. Jan documented __________ aboard such ships.
A) the poor and inadequate food supply
B) the frequency of slave uprisings
C) the frequency of crew mutinies
D) the great care slave crews took with their cargo
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.7 Resistance and Revolt at Sea
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
32
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40. The Atlantic slave trade __________.
A) required enormous amounts of capital from those involved
B) was in steep decline by 1750
C) was dominated by the Dutch in the eighteenth century
D) was carried out entirely by Europeans
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.8 Cruelty
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
41. Historian Eric Williams has argued that __________.
A) the crews on slavers were intentionally cruel.
B) ship captains encouraged cruelty toward slaves.
C) the terrors of the Middle Passage have been exaggerated.
D) death rates during the Middle Passage were higher than is generally thought.
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.8 Cruelty
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
42. Which of the following might help explain the frequency with which enslaved women on
board slavers were sexually abused?
A) European sailors assumed African women were promiscuous.
B) Women were worth less at sale than men were and there were fewer on board.
C) European sailors hoped to impregnate slave women.
D) African women usually made up more than 75 percent of a shipโs cargo.
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.9 African Women on Slave Ships
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
33
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43. The crews of __________ slavers generally preferred to sell their slaves in Barbados.
A) Dutch
B) Spanish
C) French
D) English
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.5 Analyze how Africans adapted to conditions in the Americas.
Topic: 2.5 Landing and Sale in the West Indies
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
44. Which of the following was true of the sale of slaves in the Americas?
A) Sales were usually agreed to months in advance.
B) Sales often took weeks or even months.
C) Slaversโ crews did little to prepare their cargoes for sale.
D) Sales only took place in three designated ports.
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.5 Analyze how Africans adapted to conditions in the Americas.
Topic: 2.5 Landing and Sale in the West Indies
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
45. The โscrambleโ was __________.
A) a method of sorting slaves by age
B) a particularly horrible form of selling slaves
C) the mad dash to leave the slave ship when it docked
D) part of the preparation of slaves for sale
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.5 Analyze how Africans adapted to conditions in the Americas.
Topic: 2.5 Landing and Sale in the West Indies
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
34
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46. How was work divided among slaves during the seasoning process in the West Indies?
A) Children worked alongside their parents, sharing work hours and tasks.
B) Masters generally divided the slaves into several gangs.
C) Creoles never worked in the fields.
D) Most of the slaves were chosen for skilled tasks, such as carpentry and bricklaying.
Answer: B
Learning Objective: 2.6 Describe โseasoning.โ
Topic: 2.6 Seasoning
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
47. Which of the following was true of Creoles?
A) Creoles were generally more familiar with European languages.
B) Creoles never became accustomed to the diseases and new climate of North America.
C) Creoles refused to help train new arrivals.
D) Creoles were considered less valuable than other Africans.
Answer: A
Learning Objective: 2.6 Describe โseasoning.โ
Topic: 2.6 Seasoning
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
48. How did a planter decide if a slave had been โseasonedโ?
A) The slave began to long for Africa.
B) The slave began to speak Spanish, French, or English fluently.
C) The slave seemed psychologically stable and not suicidal.
D) The slave settled down, married, and produced children.
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.7 Describe the treatment of slaves in the Americas.
Topic: 2.7 The End of the Journey: Masters and Slaves in the Americas
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
35
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49. Why did the African kingdoms of Guinea and western Central Africa fight fiercely to
continue participation in the slave trade?
A) The kingdoms had developed a religious dedication to the slave trade.
B) Tribal women wanted the slave trade continued.
C) The kingdoms were economically dependent on the slave trade.
D) The British government forced Africans to continue the slave trade.
Answer: C
Learning Objective: 2.8 Discuss the factors involved in ending the Atlantic slave trade.
Topic: 2.8 The Ending of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Connections
50. Which of the following was the most important reason that the British abolished the Atlantic
slave trade in 1807?
A) The British had begun to believe that racism was scientifically incorrect.
B) The British had begun to view the slave trade as violating their religious beliefs.
C) Many stories had been spread in Europe about the benefits of the slave trade.
D) The British economy became less dependent on agriculture by the late 1700s.
Answer: D
Learning Objective: 2.8 Discuss the factors involved in ending the Atlantic slave trade.
Topic: 2.8 The Ending of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
Essay
51. How did European and African policies and beliefs regarding slavery differ over time during
the Atlantic slave trade? What factors contributed to these differences?
Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Explain that both peoples viewed slavery as an economic institution.
2. Explain that Africans, unlike Europeans, did not view slavery as a racial institution.
3. Point out that neither Africans nor Europeans possessed the concept of racial solidarity.
Africans remained the primary sellers of slaves to Europeans, obtaining Africans for sale
either through village raids or by kidnapping families and individuals.
4. Note that although Africans initially resisted selling members of their own ethnic group as
slaves to Europeans, they did not at first believe that it was wrong to do so.
Learning Objective: 2.2 Compare and contrast the slave trade in Africa with the Atlantic slave
trade.
Topic: 2.2 The Slave Trade in Africa and the Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
36
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52. Trace the life of a West African slave through the major turning points of the Atlantic slave
trade, starting with capture in Africa. What stages would a typical enslaved African experience
as he or she awaited shipment to the colonies of the Americas?
Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Explain that West Africans were captured as slaves by other Africans through wars and
village raids. Slaves were marched from the interior to the coast and held in factories
awaiting sale. Some Africans were also kidnapped by Europeans.
2. Point out that slaves were loaded aboard European slave ships for shipment to the
Americas.
3. Note that the crossing, or Middle Passage, varied from 40 days to several months.
4. Note that the process of sale was often traumatic.
5. Conclude that many Africans were โseasonedโ in the Caribbean before being shipped
elsewhere or put to work on sugar plantations.
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4 The African-American Ordeal from Capture to Destination
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
53. Explain the technology of a slave ship in terms of transporting African slaves. How did
Europeans use technology to outfit slave ships for transporting Africans across the Atlantic to the
colonies of the Americas?
Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Define that slave ships (called slavers) varied in size but grew larger over the centuries. A
shipโs tonnage determined how many slaves it could carry, with the formula being two slaves
per ton. A ship of 200 tons might therefore carry 400 slaves.
2. Note that captains often ignored the formula. Some kept their human cargo light,
calculating that smaller loads lowered mortality and made revolt less likely. Most captains
were โtight packersโ who squeezed human beings together hoping that large numbers would
offset increased deaths.
3. Explain that the slaversโ cargo space was generally only five feet high. Shipsโ carpenters
halved this vertical space by building shelves, so slaves might be packed above and below on
planks that measured only 5.5 feet long and 1.3 feet wide. Consequently, slaves had only
about 20 to 25 inches of headroom.
4. Conclude that to add to the discomfort, the crews chained male slaves together in pairs to
help prevent rebellion and lodged them away from women and children. Crewmen often
strung nets along the sides of the ship to prevent African suicide attempts.
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.2 The Slavers and Their Technology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
37
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54. Discuss the concept of โcrueltyโ as it applied to the treatment of African slaves during the
Middle Passage segment of the Atlantic slave trade. Is it possible to use modern moral arguments
to understand European and African participation in the Atlantic slave trade?
Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Explain that historians debate how much cruelty slave ship crews inflicted on African
slaves. The goal of captain and crew was to deliver as many live African slaves as possible.
2. Point out that the slave trade required extremely large amounts of investment capital in
ships, supplies, and crewmen.
3. Note that some historians argue that the ordeal of slaves on a ship was similar to the
challenges experienced by indentured servants.
4. Explain that the lack of fresh water, adequate food, overcrowding, and extreme weather
combined to inflict suffering on all passengers at sea during the colonial period.
6. Conclude that African women were sexually exploited during the Middle Passage, and this
experience sets off the ordeal as unique compared to that of indentured servitude.
7. Conclude that cruelty and suffering are historically relative in that practices acceptable in
the past are now considered inhumane. Cultures distinguish between what constitutes
acceptable behavior to their own people on the one hand and to strangers on the other.
Learning Objective: 2.4 Trace the experiences of enslaved Africans from capture to arrival in the
West Indies.
Topic: 2.4.8 Cruelty; 2.4.9 African Women on Slave Ships
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
55. How did the Atlantic slave trade end? What major political figures were involved in the
process? Why did slavery continue in the Americas into the mid-1800s?
Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Explain that the cruelties associated with the Atlantic slave trade helped to end the system,
as did the rise of the Industrial Revolution in England.
2. Note that in the late 1700s, British politicians such as William Wilberforce, Granville
Sharp, and Thomas Clarkson began a religiously based moral crusade against slavery and the
slave trade.
3. Point out that Britainโs antipathy to the slave trade helped abolition because the British
dominated the trade.
4. Explain that the English realized that industry and trade rather than plantation slave-based
agriculture provided the most profits during the 1800s.
5. Note that Britain banned the slave trade in 1807. The United States followed suit in 1808.
But American, Brazilian, and Spanish slavers defied abolition of the slave trade for decades.
6. Conclude that slavery continued in the Americas because of the high demand for cotton
and sugar for factory development and elite market sale.
Learning Objective: 2.8 Discuss the factors involved in ending the Atlantic slave trade.
Topic: 2.8 The Ending of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
38
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