Keep in mind I'm super ignorant of this, but I couldn't imagine Native Americans could have really been used as slaves. I'm sure you can find evidence of it, but the reason Africans were effectively used as slaves was because they were completely foreign to America and had no social connections. A native slave has a decent chance of escaping, knowing the land, finding someone who speaks their language etc. A black slave that escapes is completely lost in every aspect because their only source of social safety is back on the plantation.
From everything I've seen and read about it didn't take long for settlers to decide genocide was the only option to consider for the native population.
Thousands of Indians were enslaved in Colonial New England, according to Margaret Ellen Newell. Alan Gallay writes that between 1670 and 1715, more Indians were exported into slavery through Charles Town (now Charleston, South Carolina) than Africans were imported. Brett Rushforth recently attempted a tally of the total numbers of enslaved, and he told me that he thinks 2 million to 4 million indigenous people in the Americas, North and South, may have been enslaved over the centuries that the practice prevailed.
I vaguely remember reading in high school that Native Americans were worked to death on sugar plantations, and African slaves were brought in to replace them. I can't say for the contiguous US though.
My people weren't slaves, "just" indentured workers being paid a pittance in exchange for super-profitable goods provided under a system of increasing social control... wait, yeah, that was just slavery with extra steps and a piece of paper they couldn't read.
Keep in mind I'm super ignorant of this, but I couldn't imagine Native Americans could have really been used as slaves. I'm sure you can find evidence of it, but the reason Africans were effectively used as slaves was because they were completely foreign to America and had no social connections. A native slave has a decent chance of escaping, knowing the land, finding someone who speaks their language etc. A black slave that escapes is completely lost in every aspect because their only source of social safety is back on the plantation.
From everything I've seen and read about it didn't take long for settlers to decide genocide was the only option to consider for the native population.
They were very heavily enslaved.
I vaguely remember reading in high school that Native Americans were worked to death on sugar plantations, and African slaves were brought in to replace them. I can't say for the contiguous US though.
You're thinking of the Taino in what's how Haiti/the Dominican Republic, I think
counterpoint: columbus on hispanola
My people weren't slaves, "just" indentured workers being paid a pittance in exchange for super-profitable goods provided under a system of increasing social control... wait, yeah, that was just slavery with extra steps and a piece of paper they couldn't read.