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if you were visiting Virginia in 1700 you would see African-Americans doing all of the following except

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Final answer:

In Virginia circa 1700, African-Americans would not have been seen carrying weapons, gathering in public, or traveling without permission due to restrictive legislation, and instead would be found working on plantations under white supervision.

Step-by-step explanation:

If you were visiting Virginia in 1700, you would not see African-Americans carrying weapons, gathering in public, or traveling without permission. These practices were prohibited by an act passed by the Virginia legislature in 1680, 'an act for preventing Negroes Insurrections.' By 1705, the Virginia General Assembly had enacted the Slave Codes of 1705, which firmly established the status of African-Americans as slaves, primarily in agricultural settings such as tobacco plantations.

This sealed the fate of African immigrants and their descendants by denying them the opportunities for freedom and advancement that some Africans had enjoyed in the earlier decades after their arrival in 1619, when some could acquire land and work alongside white indentured servants. Thus, in visiting Virginia in 1700, you would see African-Americans working on plantations under white supervision, but they would not have the same freedoms as the white population due to the legal distinctions created by the Slave Codes and other restrictive legislation.

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