-23- Except in the indigo and rice area of Carolina, towards the close of the century Negro slave labor was not considered profitable. However, the price of tobacco seemed fixed at a half a penny the pound, except for the very best grades, and the greater planters were experimenting with slaves. Lady Berkeley, Ralph Wormeley and a few others had already tried Negro workers on fairly large scale operations and found them profitable. A Negro, after a year's training, did as much as a white servant, and his food and clothes cost hardly half as much as those of an indentured man or woman. The Negro could not run away to the frontier, because the Indians would kill him; he did not expect a heifer, a new suit of clothes and two pigs if he were set free; and in case a black man were freed, he hardly knew what to do - he certainly could not claim a hundred acres of land. Hence a freed Negro was not a free man. Everywhere vestries and county courts had been pondering these questions and rendering decisions: if a Negro became a Christian, he must still remain a slave; if a Negro woman bore children, they were in some cases the property of her master, |