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Gabs Feed Blog of Friday, 2 September 2022

Source: gabsfeed.live

The disturbing history of enslaved mothers forced to breastfeed white babies in the 1600s

The slave trade period was a time when black women were ordered by their masters to nurse their white babies.

A wet nurse is a woman who provides breast milk for a child from her breasts and this was common in the 19th-century idea behind this was that black women were not considered as good as white women so that they could produce milk that would be better for white babies than their mothers' milk.

This practice became popular in the 19th century because it was believed that black women's milk would make white babies healthier and stronger.

The practice of using a wet nurse is most common among the wealthy and those unable to breastfeed their child.

The slave trade period was one of the darkest periods in the record for African Americans. During this time, many black women were compelled to become wet nurses for white children.

This practice was particularly common among wealthy families with young children and those who could not produce enough milk because they had recently given birth or were unable to breastfeed at all.

The term "nurse" comes from the French word for "to suckle," meaning that a wet nurse was someone who breastfed another person's baby in addition to their own.
Nurses are usually either married women who have plenty of milk, or they are our mothers who need the extra money.

A wet nurse's duties include not only breastfeeding but also caring for and caring for the baby and serving as a mother figure in many ways.