Racial #History
On this day Sep 20, 1664
Maryland Passes Colonies’ First Law Opposing Interracial Marriage
On September 20, 1664, Maryland’s all-white, all-male legislature passed the first colonial law intended to prevent interracial marriage.
The law also stipulated that white women who married enslaved Black men would become indentured to their husbands’ enslaver for the duration of their spouses’ lives. Altogether, it bolstered a rigid racial caste system by denying dignity and humanity to interracial couples and condemned countless children to the horrific condition of enslavement.
@TheNewsOwl I didn’t know that about MD, I have read a lot about VA.
This 1664 law was the first of a series of “anti-miscegenation” laws Maryland passed in opposition to intimate relationships between Black and white partners interacting as equals, even as white enslavers were often permitted to inflict sexual violence against Black women, men, and children with impunity.