Mad Myths in History that Just Won’t Go Away

Mad Myths in History that Just Won’t Go Away

Khalid Elhassan - March 24, 2022

Mad Myths in History that Just Won’t Go Away
Scotts were not victims of the transatlantic slave trade, but active participants and beneficiaries. De Gruyter

26. Indentured Servants Were Quite Distinct From Slaves

In the New World, marriages or long-term relationships between black slaves and indentured servants, whether Scotts or otherwise, were rare. For a white indentured man, any children he fathered upon a slave woman would become the slaves of her master. For a white indentured woman, pregnancy was dangerous. It constituted breach of contract, and could entail harsh criminal penalties such as whipping, and extra time added to her indenture as punishment. Unlike black slaves, white indentured servants, whether Scottish or otherwise, could look forward to an end of their term of service. That created tensions between the two groups. Especially since white indentured servants were not above racial prejudice against blacks.

Mad Myths in History that Just Won’t Go Away
Black slaves cutting sugar cane in the Caribbean. National Museums, Liverpool

For many indentured servants, racism was a good way to feel less bad about their unfortunate circumstances. They were at least free, unlike the enslaved blacks. Black slaves in turn often mocked the prejudice of white indentured servants by pointing out how little value they had to their white masters despite their skin color. As a rule of thumb, white indentured servants who survived their indenture integrated into mainstream white society or forged their own communities. Of those who did not return to Britain, many became smallholders with their own farms, and tried to compete with the large slave plantations. Some prospered and joined the colonial elites – something that was not an option for black slaves.

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