Answer Key for Teachers Fasttrack to America's Past
Section 2:  Colonial America
Page 2 - 15 and 2 - 16   Map - The Spread of the Slave Trade
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Answers for the blanks:
(See the word bank at the bottom of  2 -15.)
 
 
Africa -  ...for many centuries...
Portugal -  ...their sugar plantations...
Brazil - ...sugar soared in...
Hispaniola - ...population declined...
Jamestown -  ...a permanent slave...
Charles Town -  ...all heavy users...
Boston -  ...sugar and molasses.
England -  ...is now upper New York.
Inuit -  ...in the U.S. ended...


The Picture:
 
   A sailing ship of the size typically used in the slave trade.  Conditions on board for the captured slaves were horrific, and many died during the voyage.
Tips for completing the map:

   Students should work from the finished map shown on the Internet support site or from our overhead transparency map collection.  Emphasize neatness from the beginning! 

   Students should complete this map as they work on the facing page.  Have students read the first paragraph aloud, decide together on the right answer for the blank, then locate and shade the area of the Slave Coast with an orange color pencil. 
   Do the next paragraph the same way, and have students shade Portugal with the purple color pencil.  Point out the location of Madeira and the Canary Islands.
   Continue through the paragraphs on the facing page, working on the maps as you go.  When you get to the paragraph that discusses the trading triangle, have students carefully draw a trading triangle connecting Boston, Africa and the West Indies. 
   Students should label the triangle with a #2 pencil - be sure they understand what molasses is.  It is a by-product of sugar making, and was converted to rum by merchants in the Boston area. 
   Finally, have students locate and shade England.  Point out that England, including her colonies, profited greatly from the slave trade, as did many other European countries.  But England was also home to the world's first anti-slavery society.  Students should also know that slavery existed throughout the world's history in every civilization.  Only the civilization of Europe and the Americas - called Western civilization - developed a widespread movement that eventually ended slavery.


 
Reminder:  Students and teachers can also view the map shown below in the Maps section of the Internet support site.  A set of overhead transparencies of the completed maps is available at a modest price.

 
 

 
 
Limited Reproduction Rights Granted
   Teachers whose classes are legitimate users of the Fasttrack to America's Past workbook may print this Answer Key to paper for easy reference while teaching and planning lessons.  All other reproduction is prohibited.  Copyright 2003 by David Burns.