Indian Slavery was a practice of the
Spanish from the earliest days on the
Caribbean islands they first settled. One of the first localities for intensive use of
slaves was the
gold mines of
Hispaniola. This resulted in the
extermination of
Native Americans on most of the islands. A very few mixed-blood survivors remain, especially on
Jamaica, and are called Maroons as do some mixed blood surviors of the
Arawak on Cuba. Some
Carib survive on
Dominica.
Indian slavery was also practiced by the English in the Carolinas who sold Native American captives into slavery on the English plantations in the Caribbean.
Enslaved Native Americans generally died after a short time in the conditions of plantation slavery.
Many Native American tribes did enslave small numbers of captives and in the southwestern United States a few of them were sold to local Hispanic residents. In at least one instance in the San Luis Valley of Colorado a female household slave continued in her status long after the Emancipation Proclamation.
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