Question:
Nice slave owners?
2007-10-11 15:39:46 UTC
I would like to know of anyone who has concrete references to prove that there were some, albeit few, slave owners that actually treated their slaves with kindness? Desperately need to know to win a bet!
25 answers:
2007-10-11 15:42:13 UTC
read a U.S history book that talks about slavery



that's the only proof i can think of

and there were nice slave owners
2007-10-11 15:54:52 UTC
I have read accounts of slave owners who treated their slaves with kindness. But, this was a misguided type of kindness. These slave owners still thought of their slaves as child-like beings who must be told what to do. They still had very few personal rights and were not free to make their own decisions about anything. Families could still be separated arbitrarily as the owner saw fit. The slaves were still considered chattel by these owners. I guess you could call these owners the best of the worst. There were some owners who even granted freedom to their slaves when it became apparent that the south would not win the war. Not because they felt it was right, but because it was inevitable.
Peaches
2007-10-11 16:50:35 UTC
Try checking info on Robert Carter III of Virginia.



He freed his slaves, or had them freed after his death. This was started 72 years before the Emancipation Proclamation. I think that constitutes treating them with kindness.



The following quote from the website below:



"But Carter, deeply influenced by the new anti-slavery ideas of the Baptist Church, became convinced that slavery was "contrary to the principles of religion and justice," court records say.



At that time the Abolitionists Movement was beginning to emerge, and in 1782, Virginia passed a law allowing slave owners to free slaves under certain conditions.



"He acted at the only possible moment he could have," said John Barden, a Duke University historian. "He probably could not have done this 10 years before or 10 years later."



Carter arranged that no more than 30 of his slaves would be freed in any one year. The youngest would be freed when they reached 21, those over 45 were freed immediately. Under these terms, slaves were freed annually up to 1812, eight years after Carter's death.



These individual emancipations were recorded in county courthouses near his plantations, but Carter's act essentially was a private one. And it was not popular with other slave owners who feared unrest.



"He was viewed as a traitor to his class," said University of Maryland historian Ira Berlin."
Dawn
2007-10-11 20:48:28 UTC
I suppose kindness is an odd way to answer this, but for the time the slaves that were taught to read and write and small freedoms was considered a great kindness for the time. Even more of a brutal answer is that a lot of slave owner never abused their slaves for they were the workers that brought the money to the plantations, etc. If the slaves were brutalized they physically wouldn't be able to earn their owners money.
DrIG
2007-10-11 15:47:22 UTC
Spend teh money wisely.



Quoted from http://www.cstnews.com/Code/Slavery4.html



It is also true that slavery was wrong even when the slave owner was kind, thoughtful, and benevolent. All slave owners were not haters or sadistic tyrants. Most of them were average businessmen who needed workers. It was not good business to mistreat a worker. Dead slaves couldn't work! In fact, some slave owners were thoughtful and kind.



Some slave owners saw the wisdom in taking care of their slaves, even encouraging marriage to the extent of giving them a house, a plot of ground, and household goods. A slave with a family, home, garden, and some farm animals would be less inclined to rebellion than others. Slaves were not worked from daybreak to sundown. The January 1979 issue of Natural History reported that "Slaves spent their hours away from the field doing household chores, making handicrafts, hunting, and fishing, cultivating their own food, and entertaining themselves with dancing." Archeological research at slave cabins in Georgia and Florida reveal that some slaves even had firearms!
sugarbabe
2007-10-11 16:03:44 UTC
Try the slave narratives. There probably were a few who were kind, who thought of slavery as a necessary evil; after all, manpower and hand tools were all they had to produce a crop. I've often thought that slavery would have become unprofitable with the advent of the industrial revolution and invention of mechanized farming equipment. however, as "kind" as a slave owner might be, the basic inhumanity negated any kindness, in my opinion.
2007-10-11 15:43:09 UTC
well i don't have concrete references but there has to be some! i mean come on not everyone has a heart of stone lol.



o here you go!!



There were nice slave owners who did not hurt their slaves,so many slaves did not run away. The nice slave owners knew that if they were mean, the slaves would run away and the work would not be done on the plantation.



that was from this site...http://library.thinkquest.org/5643/sppe.htm
2007-10-11 15:42:42 UTC
General Robert E . Lee and General Jackson



look up the civil war and the lives of these two generals who were slave owners with lee letting his go free and he did treat them with kindness
2007-10-11 15:43:53 UTC
usually smaller slave owner (poorer than the minute elite) who had less than ten slaves treated them better than on the plantations. not sure if it was pure kindness, as much of the south believed in the idea of white supremacy during the time, but the were nicer
sallymarlyn
2007-10-11 15:44:25 UTC
Any working parent knows that their children are just slaves until 18. If you never got an allowance but had to do chores around the house that would qualify as slavery. And considering that most parents are good to their kids, this qualifies.
Erin B
2007-10-11 15:45:26 UTC
I'd say Thomas Jefferson - but I'm sure people will jump all over me. Stephen Ambrose once wrote that Jefferson thought of slaves as "inferior and childlike", so I don't know for sure. Plus there was that whole Jefferson/Hemmings situation...so who knows!
Kanesha J
2007-10-11 15:43:31 UTC
There is no such thing as a nice slave owner. If they were nice they wouldn't own slaves
New Moon Daughter
2007-10-11 15:45:53 UTC
Anyone who owned a slave I'd hardly classify as "nice".

Its oxymoronic. A human owning another human can never be nice.

Sorry.
2007-10-11 16:43:22 UTC
thomas jefferson treated his slaves like his personal family per the history channel
Kieron M
2007-10-11 15:48:42 UTC
Cicero a Roman Republican statesman treated his slave Tiro very well, looked after him in a grave illness and freed him. He also corresponded with him in his convalescence.
robee
2007-10-11 15:43:46 UTC
I doubt any of them were nice. If they were they would have freed their slaves. Thomas Jefferson didn't even free his mistress Sally Hemmings. He did, however, free his children
Bagmoore
2007-10-11 15:44:31 UTC
Driving Miss Daisy.

True Story.
Shortstuff13
2007-10-11 15:42:56 UTC
Thomas Jefferson was so nice to his female slaves that he had sex with them & they bore his childre.
2007-10-11 15:44:42 UTC
The law of slavery > Master–slave legal relationships

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Open Workspace The master–slave relationship was the cornerstone of the law of slavery, and yet it was an area about which the law often said very little. In many societies the subordination of the slave to his owner was supposed to be complete; in general, the more complete an owner's control over his slave, the less the law was likely to say about it.



A major touchstone of the nature of a slave society was whether or not the owner had the right to kill his slave. In most Neolithic and Bronze Age societies slaves had no such right, for slaves from ancient Egypt and the Eurasian steppes were buried alive or killed to accompany their deceased owners into the next world. Among the Northwest Coast Tlingit, slave owners killed their slaves in potlatches to demonstrate their contempt for property and wealth; they also killed old or unwanted slaves and threw their bodies into the Pacific Ocean. An owner could kill his slave with impunity in Homeric Greece, ancient India, the Roman Republic, Han China, Islamic countries, Anglo-Saxon England, medieval Russia, and many parts of the American South before 1830.



That was not the case in other societies. The Hebrews, the Athenians, and the Romans under the principate restricted the right of slave owners to kill their human chattel. The Code of Justinian changed the definition of the slave from a thing to a person and prescribed the death penalty for an owner who killed his slave by torture, poison, or fire. Spanish law of the 1260s and 1270s denied owners the right to kill their slaves. Lithuanian and Muscovite law forbade the killing, maiming, or starving of a returned fugitive slave. Ch'ing Chinese law punished a master who killed his slave, and that punishment was more severe if the slave had done no wrong. The Aztecs under some circumstances put to death a slave owner who killed his slave. No society, on the other hand, had the slightest sympathy for the slave who killed his owner. Roman law even prescribed that all other slaves living under the same roof were to be put to death along with the slave who had committed the homicide.



Assault and general brutality were other concerns of the law of slavery. In antiquity slaves often had the right to take refuge in a temple to escape cruel owners, but that sometimes afforded little protection. The ancient Franks and the Germans warned owners against cruelty. The Code of Justinian and the Spanish Siete Partidas deprived cruel owners of their slaves, and that tradition went into the Louisiana Black Code of 1806, which made cruel punishment of slaves a crime. In modern societies brutality and sadistic murder of slaves by their owners were rarely condoned on the grounds that such episodes demoralized other slaves and made them rebellious, but few slave owners were actually punished for maltreating their slaves. In the American South 10 codes prescribed forced sale to another owner or emancipation for maltreated slaves. Nevertheless, cases such as State v. Hoover (North Carolina, 1839) and State v. Jones (Alabama, 1843) were considered sensational because slave owners were punished for savagely “correcting” their slaves to death.



It was not an axiom of the master–slave relationship that the former automatically had sexual access to the latter. That was indeed the case in most societies, ranging from the ancient Middle East, Athens, and Rome to Africa, all Islamic countries, and the American South. Places such as Muscovy, however, forbade owners to rape their female slaves, while the Chinese and the Lombards forbade the raping of married slave women. More problematic were sexual relations between mistresses and male slaves. Athens and Rome both put the slave to death, and Byzantine law prescribed that the mistress was to be executed and the slave to be burned alive. The Danish Virgin Islands' laws of 1741, 1755, and 1783, in an attempt to protect northern Europeans from African “contamination,” prescribed a fine of 2,000 pounds of sugar for a man who raped a black slave, and a white woman who had sexual relations with a black slave was to be fined, imprisoned, and then deported.



The labour and food regimes were central to almost every slave's life. In societies where the owner's control over his slave was total, such as the Roman Empire or the pre-1830 American South, the law said little or nothing about how long he could work him and whether his slave had a right to food and clothing. In South India the slave owner had an absolute right to whatever labour his slave was capable of rendering. In Muscovy, on the other hand, a slave owner was jailed for forcing his slaves to labour on Sunday. In Judea in 200 BC, in Sicily in 135–32 BC, and on the Nile in AD 46 regulations prescribed the food rations a slave could expect. The Lithuanian Statute of 1588 and the Russians in 1603 and 1649 decreed that slaves had a right to be fed. The Danish Virgin Islands in 1755 prescribed adequate food rations. The Alabama Slave Code of 1852 mandated that the owner had to provide slaves of working age a sufficiency of healthy food, clothing, attention during illness, and necessities in old age.







ENCYCLOPEDIA (BRITANNICA ONLINE)

I CANT PROVIDE A LINK BECAUSE YOU NEED A SUBSCRIPTION
somerandomguy702
2007-10-11 15:43:36 UTC
I'm nice and own slaves.
2007-10-11 15:45:04 UTC
Check and see if any of

your ancestors owned slaves.

If you are a kind person, then,

your ancestors probably were kind too!
Allie
2007-10-11 15:42:59 UTC
Oh, I'm sure there were.

Here's a link: http://library.thinkquest.org/5643/sppe.htm
shermynewstart
2007-10-11 15:42:45 UTC
I think they're all dead now. There's a reason Africans are black, while African americans are milk-chocolate.
enord
2007-10-11 15:42:14 UTC
thomas jefferson.
2007-10-11 15:42:24 UTC
tried google?


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