Chapter 16 Slavery.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 16 Slavery

Intro/Cotton Is King From the Revolution to 1793 slavery on its way out Slave chained to Gin, planter chained to slave Caused planter to constantly look for more land

North profited form slavery too Sell cotton to get money for manufacturing By 1840 ½ of us export is cotton South produced ½ of worlds cotton

Britain needs South Made south feel superior Cotton was King, gin his throne, slaves his henchmen

Planter aristocracy South: oligarchy Most slave-owners own large plantations Controlled wealth Nobless Oblige Wide gap between rich and poor, uneducated and educated Lived in old world: Sir Walter Scott Ivanhoe Maryland makes Jousting state sport in 1962

Southern Women(still aristocracy) Lady of Plantation: Lot of power Manage house Manage slave Social status Did not support abolition

Slaves of Slave System Plantations: expensive Land Butchery Small farmers give up and go west, plantation owners bought up land (slaves to the slave system)

How did slavery/farming = financial instability Betting on crops Live in debt Beholden to banks Slaves expensive and unpredictable Would they work Disease? One crop economy North makes profit South furnished the corpse and the hole in the ground

White majority 2/3 of south owned less then 10 slaves Only ¼ quarter owned slaves Most had small farm and maybe 1 slave Biggest group had no slaves at all Hated upper class Snobocracy Sustenance farmers Rednecks/ Crackers: slavery was American dream

Mountain Whites (still white majority) Appalachian MTS Did not fit definition of south Fought against slavery Unique way of talking

Free Blacks Slaves without masters Some blacks in south free: 250000 Upper south freed because of Revolution Lower south Mulattos free Some Purchased their freedom Third race Not allowed in certain jobs Could not testify against whites Hijacked into slavery Constant reminders that slavery did not have to exist

African Americans in North (still Free Blacks) Racism No vote Not allowed in some schools (swamp) Competition for jobs with immigrants Even Frederick Douglas beaten

Plantation Slavery 4 million slaves in 1860 1808 legal importation had stopped Black Ivory still traded Very few punished for illegal trade Slavery was an investment Had to be cared for Not put in dangerous situation Sold for profit Auctions: Brutal and dehumanizing

Life Under the Lash Conditions varied but never good Worked from light to dark Drivers and Breakers Slavery grew in Black Belt Isolation Tried to keep families Social norms Religion mixed Christian and African roots

Burdens of Bondage Degrading No education Able to Rebel in own ways -some sabotage -Runaway -Rebellions Prosser 1800 Vesey 1822 Turner 1831

Early Abolition Slowly people started speak out Roots Quakers American Colonization Society 1817 1822 Liberia started Capital Monrovia -Why a failure?

1833 Brits stop slavery in W Indies 1830s started to pick up 1833 Brits stop slavery in W Indies Second Great Awakening spurred freedom Meetings trained people

Weld: Appealed to Rural and uneducated Influenced by Tappan Brothers Paid for his seminary Learned from Beecher Weld expelled for being too aggressive Wrote pamphlet: America as it is: Inspired Uncle Tom

Radical Abolitionism 1831 Garrison Inspired by 2GA The Liberator Actually talked about seceding from S Burned Constitution 1833 American Anti Slavery Society Garrison

Phillips: Golden Trumpet No sugar, no cotton clothes

African American Abolitionists (still radical) David Walker: Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World Sojourner Truth Martin Delaney Recolonization Frederick Douglass Escaped slave 1845 Narrative Practical Political End

South Lashes Back 1831-2 South tries to quiet Slave codes tightened Turner actually hurt cause Garrison wanted man in S Nullification Crisis hurt Christian/Bible defense 1836 Gag Resolution 1835 cannot mail anti slavery

Abolitionist Impact on N At first unpopular Why? Economic, racism Tappans, Garrison, Lovejoy attacked 1850s time changed People started talking leave it where it is, but not in territories: Free Soil