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Slavery in Pennsylvania / A Dissertation Submitted to the Board of University Studies of the Johns Hopkins University in Conformity with the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 1910 cover

Slavery in Pennsylvania / A Dissertation Submitted to the Board of University Studies of the Johns Hopkins University in Conformity with the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 1910

Chapter 8: Transcriber’s Note
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About This Book

The dissertation traces the arrival and growth of Africans in the Delaware region under early colonial regimes and examines provincial legislative responses over the eighteenth century: import duties, periodic attempts to restrict traffic, conflicts with imperial commercial interests, and local economic and social pressures. It analyzes how competition with white labor, wartime enlistment, merchant resistance, and shifting public sentiment reduced the slave trade, and follows successive laws that raised duties and limited importation. The account concludes with the Revolutionary period measures that ended importation and set the state on a path toward dismantling slavery.


BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE.

Edward Raymond Turner was born May 28, 1881, in Baltimore, Maryland, where he obtained his earlier education. After receiving the degree of Bachelor of Arts at St. Johns College, Annapolis, 1904, he taught in the Baltimore schools. He entered the Johns Hopkins University in 1907, and was Fellow in History 1909–1910.