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  • The Collapse of Georgia's Anti-Sl...
Notas del episodio
In 1733, James Oglethorpe founded the colony of Georgia with a vision that was radical for its time: a utopian settlement where slavery would be permanently banned, alcohol prohibited, and land distributed in small equal plots to deserving poor families rescued from English debtors' prisons. It was designed to be everything the other Southern colonies were not. Within two decades, every one of these founding ideals had been abandoned, and Georgia had become indistinguishable from the slave-based plantation colonies surrounding it. Oglethorpe's motivations were a mixture of genuine humanitarian concern and hard-nosed imperial strategy. He had witnessed the horrors of English debtors' prisons firsthand and believed that giving the imprisoned poor a fresh start in America would simultaneously relieve suffering and create a buffer colony protecting pro ... 
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Palabras clave
plantation economyGeorgia colonyJames Oglethorpeanti-slavery experimentcolonial Americadebtors prison