Challenging the generally accepted belief that the introduction of
racial slavery to America was an unplanned consequence of a scarce
labor market, Anthony Parent, Jr., contends that during a brief
period spanning the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries
a small but powerful planter class, acting to further its emerging
economic interests, intentionally brought racial slavery to
Virginia.
Parent bases his argument on three historical developments: the
expropriation of Powhatan lands, the switch from indentured to
slave labor, and the burgeoning tobacco trade. He argues that these
were the result of calculated moves on the part of an emerging
great planter class seeking to consolidate power through large
landholdings and the labor to make them productive. To preserve
their economic and social gains, this planter class inscribed
racial slavery into law. The ensuing racial and class tensions led
elite planters to mythologize their position as gentlemen of
pastoral virtue immune to competition and corruption. To further
this benevolent image, they implemented a plan to Christianize
slaves and thereby render them submissive. According to Parent, by
the 1720s the Virginia gentry projected a distinctive cultural
ethos that buffered them from their uncertain hold on authority,
threatened both by rising imperial control and by black resistance,
which exploded in the Chesapeake Rebellion of 1730.