Foner Chapter 11. Ch. 11, Image 5 The Old South Emergence of slavery as “peculiar institution” Cotton and the growth of southern slavery--LABOR SYSTEM.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Section 10.3: The African American Community. A. Building the African American Community 1.Slaves created a community where an indigenous culture developed,
Advertisements

Section 1: The Antebellum South I. Sectional Similarities a) Western European Culture b) Power of the White Male II. Sectional Differences I. Largely Rural.
Chapter 4 Part 2 Out of Many Mr. Thomas. Families and Communities Development of African American community and culture, the family was the most important.
The “Old South”: An Illusion of Unity The “Solid South” has always been more fiction than fact—even in the years just prior to the Civil War.
Slavery and Society,
APUSH: Slavery, Freedom, and The Crisis of Union
Copyright ©1999 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.1 Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY: A SURVEY, 10/e Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South.
Slavery and Southern Culture. The Problem of Labor Colonies needed labor to grow cash crops Indentured Servitude failed by But in 1790, it was.
US History: Slavery, Freedom, and The Crisis of Union
Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation 6/e
Chapter 11 National and Regional Growth. Learning Targets I Can…Define and identify the Cotton Gin, Eli Whitney, Nat Turner, and Spirituals. I Can…Define.
Chapter 9: The Old South, AP US History Chapter 9: The Old South,
APUSH Weber 217.
13.3 Plantation South MAIN IDEA The invention of the cotton gin and the demand for cotton caused slavery to spread in the South. WHY IT MATTERS NOW The.
America: Past and Present Chapter 13
Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Give Me Liberty! AN AMERICAN HISTORY FOURTH EDITION.
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
Standard 8.9 Slavery in the South. The Cotton Boom Eli Whitney invents cotton gin -- machine that cleans cotton (1793) Makes cotton cleaning more efficient,
Chapter 4. The development of the slavery system The history of the slave trade and the Middle Passage Community development among Africans Americans.
The South and Slavery AP CHAPTER 10. COTTON AND EXPANSION IN THE OLD SOUTHWEST The South was the ideal place to grow cotton Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin made.
SLAVES AND MASTERS America: Past and Present Chapter 11.
The Old South and Slavery Chapter 12. South Top Ten Come up with the top 10 things that you would tell someone about the South today.
Manifest Destiny-Path to Civil War North and South Ideologies.
©2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved. ©2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved.McGraw-Hill Chapter 13: The.
Copyright ©2006 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 12/e Chapter Ten: America’s Economic Revolution.
ANTEBELLUM SLAVERY Southern Economy King Cotton Plantation Life Non-Gentry Class Slave Family.
The American Promise: A History of the United States Fourth Edition CHAPTER 13 The Slave South 1820–1860 Copyright © 2009 by Bedford/St. Martin’s Roark.
THE SOUTH, SLAVERY, AND ITS ROLE IN SOCIETY. CHAPTER 11: SLAVES AND MASTERS.
The Old South and Slavery, Chapter 12. Cash Crops  Cotton is King  The British Textile Industry  The Cotton Gin  The Removal of Indians.
Give Me Liberty! Norton Media Library An American History
Copyright ©2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South.
Sectionalism
The Peculiar Institution- Slavery. Standards & Essential Question SSUSH8: Explain the relationship between growing north-south divisions and westward.
Chapter 15 America: A Narrative History 7 th edition Norton Media Library by George Brown Tindall and David Emory Shi.
Cotton, Slavery and the Old South Chapter 11. Early South Upper South - tobacco *market unstable *uses up soil *some shift to Other crops.
THE OLD SOUTH & SLAVERY A10Q
Slavery and Southern Economy
Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South. Before we begin examining Chapter 11, in your group answer the following questions: How did the Market.
Ch. 12 The South Growth of the Cotton Industry Standard: Describe the development of the agrarian economy in the South, identify.
The Slaveholders’ Regime apush. Slavery in perspective Legally: Property Morally: absence of freedom –Unrestrained personal control of one group over.
Copyright ©2011, ©2008 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. The American People: Creating a Nation and a Society, Seventh Edition Nash Jeffrey.
The invention of cotton gin in 1793 made short-staple cotton profitable. The invention of cotton gin in 1793 made short-staple cotton profitable. Pre-1793:
Chapter 11 APUSH Mrs. Price “Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.” – Abraham Lincoln.
Cotton Boom Cotton Gin made cleaning cotton efficient The Cotton Gin made cleaning cotton more efficient – Designed for short-fibered cotton One worker.
COTTON, SLAVERY, AND THE OLD SOUTH AMERICAN HISTORY: CHAPTER 11 REVIEW VIDEO
The Peculiar Institution Chapter 9, Section 3 California State Standards Chapter 9, Section 3 California State Standards
Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South.
1 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Copyright ©2000 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.1 Brinkley, THE UNFINISHED NATION, 3/e Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
WARM UP Please answer the following question in your binder: How did slaves think of freedom, and what were the sources for their beliefs?
Chapter 11 The Peculiar Institution. Cotton Is King The Second Middle Passage Increase of internal slave trade.
The invention of cotton gin in 1793 made short-staple cotton profitable. The invention of cotton gin in 1793 made short-staple cotton profitable. Pre-1793:
Objectives Explain the significance of cotton and the cotton gin to the South. Describe what life was like for free and enslaved African Americans in.
Chapter 9 The Old South,
11 Slaves and Masters.
Plantations and Slavery Spread
The Slaveholders’ Regime
Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
Divine Chapter 11: Slaves and Masters.
Alan Brinkley, American History 15/e
America: Past and Present Chapter 11
CHAPTER 13 The Slave South,
The Peculiar Institution
Slavery Economy Reality
Life Under Slavery (9-3) Family Life
Cotton, Slavery and the Old South
11 Slaves and Masters.
Section 3: Southern Cotton Kingdom
A Peculiar Institution
Chapter Eleven: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
Presentation transcript:

Foner Chapter 11

Ch. 11, Image 5

The Old South Emergence of slavery as “peculiar institution” Cotton and the growth of southern slavery--LABOR SYSTEM –Central place of cotton in world economy –Southern dominance of world cotton supply –Emergence of United States as center of new world slavery –In the 1800s, cotton replaced sugar ad the slave labor major crop Rise of internal slave trade –Pace and magnitude –Geographical patterns –Public visibility –Integral place in southern commerce –Importance to Cotton Kingdom

Ch. 11, Intro Image

The Old South (cont’d) Slavery’s impact on national life –Political –Economic Cotton (and slavery) helped North’s growth –Commerce –Manufacturing South-by 1860 almost 4 million slaves –Southern economy depended on slavery –Vitality of plantation economy –Limits on industrialization, immigration, and urban growth –The New Orleans exception

Ch. 11, Image 6

Plain folk –Regional loyalty –Remoteness from market revolution; self-sufficiency –Class strata Isolated poor Yeomanry –Relation to planter elite (kinship) Alienation Bonds –Racial –Familial –Political –Regional –Investment in slave system Material Ideological-same belief in slavery

Ch. 11, Image 7

Planter elite –Measures of regional dominance Scale of slave ownership (250+/200 or more) Size and quality of landholding –Large plantations (w overseer) versus small family farm Income Political power –Economic engagement in world market –Paternalistic, non-competitive ethos Defining features Contributing factors Influence on southern values –Intellectual life

Ch. 11, Image 9

Ch. 11, Image 8

Ch. 11, Image 10

Proslavery argument –Rising currency in southern thought –Elements of Racial assumptions Biblical themes Notions of human progress Prospects for equality among whites –Shift to more hierarchical defense of slavery Assertion slavery was essential to human progress –Economic –cultural

Ch. 11, Image 13

Life under slavery Slaves and the law –General patterns Status as property (worked as early as 10 yo Pervasive denial of legal rights Power of slave owners over enforcement Law as mechanism of master’s control –Nineteenth-century trends Legislation to humanize bondage –Features –Contributing factors Legislation to tighten bondage –Features –Contributing factors

Ch. 11, Image 19

Ch. 11, Image 14

Life under slavery (cont’d) Slave labor –Diversity of occupations –Agricultural Small farms vs. plantations Gang labor (cotton, sugar) vs. task labor (rice) –Urban Relative autonomy and independence Growing reputation as threat to slave system Modes of order and discipline –Physical punishment –Manipulation of divisions –Material incentives –Threat of sale

Ch. 11, Image 15

Ch. 11, Image 4

Free black population –Size –Social and civil stature Blurry line between slavery and freedom Broad denial of legal rights –Growing reputation as threat to slave system –Regional variations Lower South –Small numbers –Concentration in cities –Free black elite Upper South –Concentration in farmlands –Ties to slave community

Slave culture General features –Central arenas Family Church –Chief functions Survival of bondage Preservation of self-esteem Transmission of collective values across generations –Sources African heritage American values and experiences Slave family-often stayed together –Demographic foundation –Legal constraints –Resiliency –Distinctive kinship patterns –Vulnerability to break-up through sale –Gender roles Assertion of gender roles where possible: Explain: Women and men alike suffered a sense of powerlessness

Ch. 11, Image 1

Ch. 11, Image 20

Slave culture (cont’d) Slave religion –Practices Black preachers on plantations Urban black churches –Influences Fusion of African and Christian traditions Religious revivals in South –Slaves’ version of Christianity Solace amid bondage Hope for liberation Sympathy for the oppressed Brotherhood and equality –Negation of masters’ pro-slavery version Desire for freedom and justice –As expressed in folk tales, spirituals –Reflection of American language of freedom

Ch. 11, Image 21

Ch. 11, Image 22

Resistance to slavery “Day-to-day”; “silent sabotage”—most common Escape –Obstacles –Destinations Southern cities Remote areas within South North –Underground Railroad Resourcefulness Harriet Tubman –Large-scale collective escape Infrequency of Amistad episode –Joseph Cinquez

Resistance to slavery (cont’d) Slave revolts –Major nineteenth-century episodes Gabriel’s Rebellion Louisiana sugar plantation slave rebellion Denmark Vesey conspiracy (reflected American and African influences circulating at the time) Nat Turner’s Rebellion –Notable patterns Infrequency Blend of African and American influences Link between open rebellion and quieter resistance Bleak prospects for success in South

Ch. 11, Image 23

Aftermath of Nat Turner’s rebellion in South –Delayed due to illness –Religious images –White panic through out the South –Took place outsied the hear of plantation osuth –Prompted widespread assaults on slaves –Tightening of restrictions on blacks (slave and free) –Stifling of slavery debate, abolitionism