Tag Page DomesticSlaveTrade

#DomesticSlaveTrade
LataraSpeaksTruth

At the beginning of the year, large slave auctions routinely took place in New Orleans as part of a deliberate financial process. Plantation account books closed at the end of December, and debts were reconciled immediately afterward. When numbers did not balance, enslaved people were sold to settle them. Human lives were used to correct ledgers. Early January became one of the most active periods in the domestic slave trade because it aligned with plantation finance cycles. Men, women, and children were sold not based on family ties, age, or circumstance, but on how effectively their sale could stabilize accounts and reset labor forces for the year ahead. Profit determined separation. These sales were strategic. Buyers sought labor before the planting season. Sellers cleared obligations before interest and penalties compounded. Families were broken apart at the same moment society spoke of renewal and fresh starts. For those placed on the auction block, the new year did not bring opportunity. It brought loss. New Orleans sat at the center of this system. Its auction houses, banks, shipping routes, and legal structures openly connected finance and bondage. These were not hidden abuses or rare events. Auctions were scheduled, advertised, attended, and recorded. Violence did not always arrive through chaos. Sometimes it arrived through paperwork. This pattern reveals how deeply slavery was embedded in American economic rhythms. The domestic slave trade operated through calendars, deadlines, and bookkeeping as much as force. The beginning of the year became a moment when profit quietly dictated human fate. History often frames beginnings with hope. For many enslaved people, the start of the year marked separation, instability, and the loss of control over their own lives. That contrast matters. Because slavery was not only a moral crime. It was a financial system. #ForTheRecord #HiddenHistory #DomesticSlaveTrade #AmericanSlavery #NewOrleansHistory

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