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Triangular Trade: Enslaved Africans and New England's Role

Explore the development of the triangular trade route in the New England colonies, with a focus on the inhumane treatment of enslaved Africans during the Middle Passage. Discover why profit-driven motives led to brutal conditions.

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Triangular Trade: Enslaved Africans and New England's Role

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  1. New England Colonies(cont.) Section 1-10 • The triangular trade route developed. Ships brought sugar and molasses from the West Indies to New England where the molasses was made into rum.  • From New England, rum and other manufactured foods were shipped to West Africa.  • On the second leg in West Africa, these goods were traded for enslaved Africans.  • On the last leg, the enslaved Africans were taken to the West Indies where they were sold to planters. (pages 100–103) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.

  2. New England Colonies(cont.) Section 1-11 • The profit was used to buy more molasses, and the triangular trade continued.  • One of the worst parts of the triangular trade was called the Middle Passage.  • Enslaved Africans endured inhumane treatment and conditions during the voyage across the Atlantic. (pages 100–103) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.

  3. New England Colonies (cont.) Section 1-12 Why were the enslaved Africans forced into such a brutal existence during the Middle Passage? Possible answer: The enslaved Africans’ captors and the people on the ship did not think of Africans as people but as cargo. Because the slave trade was so profitable, these people only thought of enslaved Africans as a way to make more money. As a result, the more people they could pack on a ship, the more money they would make. (pages 100–103) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answer.

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