Full Answer Section
The main reasons why some opposed introducing slavery into Georgia were:
- They believed that slavery was morally wrong. They argued that it was wrong to enslave human beings.
- They feared that slavery would lead to social unrest. They argued that slavery would create a class of people who were seen as inferior and that this would lead to conflict.
- They worried that slavery would make Georgia dependent on the slave trade. They argued that the colony should be self-sufficient and that slavery would make it reliant on other colonies for its labor force.
The main reasons of each group reveal that the purpose of the colony was different in the minds of the early settlers and the Trustees. The early settlers were primarily interested in making money, and they saw slavery as a way to do that. The Trustees, on the other hand, were more interested in creating a colony that was based on Christian principles, and they saw slavery as being incompatible with those principles.
In the end, the Trustees were able to persuade the early settlers to ban slavery in Georgia. However, the ban was eventually lifted in 1751, and slavery became an important part of the colony's economy.