Milly Yang Mrs. Swanson American Literature A3 14 April 2014 What is the definition of Liberty to African-Americans in the different ages? At the beginning of history of slaves in the United States, “the North American continent was first colonized by Europeans, the land was vast, the work was harsh, and there was a severe shortage of labor. Men and women were needed to work the land” (civilwar.org). So, in African-Americans’ minds, liberty meant running away from the unjust treatment of slavery which included terrible conditions of living, punishment through physical suffering, the separation of families, being sold as items, disallowance of education, and the enforcement that asked black women to get pregnant in order to get more slaves.However, in the course of time, African-Americans got the rights and opportunities of American citizens,. So, African-Americans changed their minds of definition of liberty in three main different ages from the beginning of slavery to the ending of slavery in the United States. In 1775, a proclamation was made that changed the way African-Americans thought about liberty. For years when America was a part of the British colonies, slavery was the most popular trend that allowed colonists to increased their production of tobacco. Colonies bought slaves from the slave market, and the slaves were just considered as working machines. There was a group of slaves that tried to dig tunnels to run away from being slaves. However, they were either caught by their owners, or caught by other whites. By 1775, hundreds of protesters and rebellions occupied the streets of Virginia. The colony was out of the control of the royal governor John Murray. On 7th November, 1775, dated on board the ship William, off Norfolk, John Murray made a proclamation which promised blacks their freedom in exchange for service in the British army. The proclamation was called the Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation. The proclamation “offered the first large-scale emancipation of slave and servant labor in the history of colonial British America”(Johnson “Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation on Slave Emancipation (1775)”). At the beginning of the Revolutionary War, George Washington rejected black recruits, but after the Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation he changed his mind. The creation of this proclamation showed the nation that Americans no longer believed that “blacks were just slaves”, and it fulfilled Americans’ core value of liberty. In 1776, the Declaration of Independence was made. According to General Colin Powell, “The Declaration of Independence, I think, is one of the most remarkable documents in the world...’Inalienable rights’...’Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness’...’We hold these truths to be self-evident’...[But] it didn’t apply to black folks. Thomas Jefferson kept slaves. But Thomas Jefferson nevertheless wrote these marvelous words, and he understood the inconsistency...”(“Revolution”). Although Americans slightly changed their sight on ...