Hanna Brinson

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The act, which largely reiterated laws that had already been passed but not strictly enforced, prevented the enslaved from assembling in groups without white supervision, selling their own goods for profit, or learning to write. The Negro Act also purported to “restrain and prevent barbarity being exercised toward slaves” because “cruelty is . . . highly unbecoming those who profess themselves Christians.”
The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism
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