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  2. List of Jamestown colonists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jamestown_colonists

    Painting of John Smith and colonists landing in Jamestown. On 4 May [O.S. 14 May] 1607, 105 to 108 English men and boys (surviving the voyage from England) established the Jamestown Settlement for the Virginia Company of London, on a slender peninsula on the bank of the James River.

  3. List of indentured servants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_indentured_servants

    This is a list of people who were once indentured servants. George Abbitt [1] Matthew Ashby [2] Sally Brant; William Buckland (architect) William Butten; John Casor; Judith Catchpole; William Ewen; Alexandre Exquemelin; Mary Morrell Folger; John Howland; Elizabeth Hubbard (Salem witch trials) Anthony Johnson (colonist) William Moraley ...

  4. Indentured servitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indentured_servitude

    Indentured servitude is a form of labor in which a person is contracted to work without salary for a specific number of years. The contract called an "indenture", may be entered voluntarily for a prepaid lump sum, as payment for some good or service (e.g. travel), purported eventual compensation, or debt repayment.

  5. Indentured servitude in British America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indentured_servitude_in...

    Between one-half and two-thirds of European immigrants to the Thirteen Colonies between the 1630s and the American Revolution came under indentures. [6] The practice was sufficiently common that the Habeas Corpus Act 1679, in part, prevented imprisonments overseas; it also made provisions for those with existing transportation contracts and those "praying to be transported" in lieu of ...

  6. Anthony Johnson (colonist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Johnson_(colonist)

    Anthony Johnson (b. c. 1600 – d. 1670) was a man from Angola who achieved wealth in the early 17th-century Colony of Virginia.Held as an "indentured servant" in 1621, he earned his freedom after several years and was granted land by the colony.

  7. Redemptioner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redemptioner

    A list of indenture registrations in Philadelphia from 1772 to 1773 survives, and it reveals that most redemptioners worked for five to seven years, to pay their masters off. (The Bible allowed no more than seven years term of any contract, [3] and this influenced both the law and public opinion.)

  8. Indenture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indenture

    Half of an indenture document of 1723 showing the randomly cut edge at the top. An indenture is a legal contract that reflects an agreement between two parties. Although the term is most familiarly used to refer to a labor contract between an employer and a laborer with an indentured servant status, historically indentures were used for a variety of contracts, including transfers and rents of ...

  9. John Punch (slave) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Punch_(slave)

    Paul Heinegg, in his Free African Americans in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware found that most families of free black people in the 1790–1810 U.S. censuses could be traced to children of white women and black men, whether free, indentured servant or enslaved person, in colonial Virginia.