Slave Mortality: Analysis of Evidence from Plantation Records
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Social Science History
- Vol. 3 (3-4) , 86-114
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0145553200022938
Abstract
Since the inception of slavery in North America the free population has been concerned with the mortality of the slave population. Slaveowners were concerned with mortality for purposes of estimating the profitability of slave investments. Opponents of slavery and the slave trade used actual and presumed slave mortality experience as arguments for abolishing the system. Death rates were viewed as a measure of demographic performance that reflected the quality of slave life. It was argued that death rates reflected, and were in part determined by, such factors as diet, physical treatment, and the quality of medical care and housing—all under the control of the slaveowners. Consequently, information on deaths was used as a standard for evaluating the severity of the slave system and for assessing regional and international differences in slavery. In the postbellum period, scholars researched and debated various issues in slave mortality. The modern discussion includes issues in the levels and determinants of slave mortality, but research has concentrated on levels, possibly due to inadequate data for extensive research on determinants of mortality.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recent Trends in American Historical Demography: Some Methodological and Conceptual ConsiderationsAnnual Review of Sociology, 1978
- The Economics of Mortality in North America, 1650–1910: A Description of a Research ProjectHistorical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History, 1978
- Slave Child Mortality: Some Nutritional Answers to a Perennial PuzzleJournal of Social History, 1977
- Mortality trends of southern blacks, 1850–1910: Some preliminary findingsExplorations in Economic History, 1976
- The Demography of the Slave Population in Antebellum AmericaJournal of Interdisciplinary History, 1975
- New Estimates of the Vital Rates of the United States Black Population During the Nineteenth CenturyDemography, 1974
- Mortality Rates and Trends in Massachusetts Before 1860The Journal of Economic History, 1972
- Breast feeding, mortality in childhood and fertility in a rural zone of SenegalPopulation Studies, 1971
- The verification of data in historical demographyPopulation Studies, 1968
- Life Span of Mississippi SlavesThe American Historical Review, 1930