The Glory Field follows the lives of The Lewis Family of South Carolina through the generations beginning with Muhummad Bilal in the time of slavery(1753) and ending with Malcolm Lewis in 1994.

intro

This blog is being created by Division 2 at Bayview Community School.

Scroll down to read many interesting facts in all the posts on Slavery, South Carolina, Jim Crow Laws, The Civil Rights Movement, Reverend Martin Luther King and The Glory Field. Keep on checking this blog for new updates on the The Glory Field and social developments following the time line of The Glory Field.

At the bottom of this blog read a summary of the novel, The Glory Field.

Don't forget to check out the students' links and read their blog scrapbooks. They contain many thoughts and feelings about the novel and virtual artifacts from the different times and places, and social events based on The Glory Field.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

• By 1752, more than 25,000 slaves were brought into the United States yearly.
• Between 1619 and 1865, 400,000 slaves entered what now makes up the United States; almost as many are estimated to have died
during capture and in transit across the Atlantic Ocean.
• Slavery was seen as “necessary” for the economic profit of landowners in the United States as well as in other areas of the Americas.
• White citizens of the United States were not punished for the beating, rape and/or murder of slaves; slaves in the United States had
no legal standing or recourse.
• Slave parents had no rights to their children, who could be sold away from them at any time.
• U.S. slaves and their descendents numbered 4,000,000 by the time of emancipation in 1865.
• Unjust structures and systems in the United States have continued to affect freed slaves and their descendents during the last 150
years.

http://www.coc.org/pdfs/ej/slavery.pdf

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