[Block 34B] Slave Quarters
Many residents of early St. Louis did not
live in grand homes, but instead in small shacks or cabins. Most
of the wealthy people of St. Louis owned African and Indian slaves.
When a family owned a large number of slaves, the slaves often lived
in small cabins at the rear of the enclosed property. Slaves under
the Spanish system - Roman Law - had greater opportunities to work
for wages and eventually purchase their freedom than they would
under the English Law of the Americans. Many eventually became landowners
themselves, and learned professional trades like blacksmithing and
carpentry. However, slavery was never a good or "benevolent" institution.
Slaves could be punished severely - beaten and whipped - and were
often held against their will. To be held as a slave was to be kept
from doing what you wanted to do, when you wanted to do it. You
were not paid for the work you did, at least not by your owners.
Most slaves received no schooling and all were considered to be
on the bottom rung of the social scale. In 1799, 268 slaves lived
in St. Louis.
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