Quote:
Originally Posted by iheartthed
It was a pretty common characteristic of slave colonies that the enslaved populations outnumbered the free populations. Before the Civil War there were a number of Deep South states that had slave majorities or near parity to free populations.
Percentage enslaved of total state populations in 1850 census
57.6% -- South Carolina
51.1% -- Mississippi
47.3% -- Louisiana
45.0% -- Florida
44.4% -- Alabama
42.1% -- Georgia
33.2% -- Virginia
33.2% -- North Carolina
27.4% -- Texas
23.9% -- Tennessee
22.4% -- Arkansas
21.5% -- Kentucky
7.1% -- District of Columbia
|
In St Domingue, the population in 1789 was roughly 89% Black slaves, 6% Whites, 5% free colored people.
In Martinique, we have more detailed censuses from the 19th century. More and more Black slaves were freed even before the official abolition of slavery by the French government in 1848. In 1832, the population of Martinique was 76.6% Black slaves, 14.7% free colored people, 8.8% Whites. In 1847, it was 60.8% Black slaves, 31.3% free colored people, 7.9% Whites.
In 1848 those 60.8% were all freed on May 22 of that year (after 2 days of rioting by the slaves because news filtering from Paris indicated that the abolition was imminent, which generated some civil disturbances, refusals to work, one slave was arrested and imprisoned, thousands of slaves then converged on St Pierre, the economic capital of the island, and targeted public buildings and houses of rich White people, and eventually on the 22nd of May the governor decided to proclaim the abolition before the arrival of the official notification from Paris).
Guadeloupe experienced the same process. In the British sugar colonies, there wasn't abolition of slavery on one particular day, it was a gradual process over decades, as slaves were gradually liberated and owners compensated (France compensated the owners AFTER the abolition of slavery, with the compensation process dragging on for years).
One interesting point: according to a paper I read, the death rate of the Black slaves of Martinique in the 1830s and 1840s was not very different from the death rate of the Whites and the death rate of the free colored peoples. This shows that by the 1830s, the treatment of slaves in the French colonies (and probably also the British ones, but I'm less sure that was the case in Brazil and the USA) was much more lenient than what it had been in the 18th century. A few years ago I read an interesting story about a White master in French Guiana who was forced to leave the colony in the 1830s because he treated his slaves too harshly, and the general opinion of the governor was that this man used 18th century methods in a century that did not accept the mistreatment of slaves as it had taken place 2 generations before.