Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEleanor Ford Modified over 8 years ago
1
10.5: Planters
2
A. Small Slave Owners 1.Most slaveholders owned only a few slaves. 2.Bad crops or high prices that curtailed or increased income affected slave-holding status 3.Middle class professionals had an easier time climbing the ladder of success. 4.Andrew Jackson used his legal and political position to rise in Southern society. Beginning as a landless prosecutor, Jackson died a plantation owner with over 200 slaves.
3
B. The Planter Elite 1.Most slaveholders inherited their wealth but sought to expand it. 2.As slavery spread so did the slave-owning elite 3.The extraordinary concentration of wealth created an elite lifestyle. 4.Most wealthy planters lived fairly isolated lives. 5.Some planters cultivated an image of gracious living in the style of English aristocrats, but plantations were large enterprises that required much attention to a variety of tasks. 6.Plantations aimed to be self-sufficient.
4
C. The Plantation Mistress 1.Following southern paternalism, in theory, each plantation was a family with the white master at its head. 2.The plantation mistress ran her own household but did not challenge her husband’s authority. 3.With slaves to do much of the labor conventionally assigned to women, it is no surprise that plantation mistresses accepted the system.
5
D. Coercion and Violence 1.The slave system rested on coercion and violence. 2.Slave women were vulnerable to sexual exploitation, though long-term relationships developed. 3.Children of master-slave relationships seldom were publicly acknowledged and often remained in bondage
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.