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Published byHoward Neal Modified over 8 years ago
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THE SOUTH AND THE SLAVERY CONTROVERSY 1793-1860
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The Cotton Gin Late 18 th century – slavery dying out Overused land, Prices falling, Unmarketable goods 1793 – Eli Whitney’s cotton gin Cotton becomes profitable
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King Cotton More slaves were needed to harvest cotton South – ½ the world’s cotton supply England bought most Would they side with the South? North – transported the cotton
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The Planter “Aristocracy” Southern elite – Only 1733 families owned more than 100 slaves Gap between rich & poor widens Private schools
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Sir Walter Scott Favorite among Southerners Author of Ivanhoe & Rob Roy Stories of feudalistic society
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Southern Women Mistress was in charge of female house slaves None were perfect All abused or punished slaves
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Slaves of the Slave System Cotton production constantly required new land Smaller farmers sold land to bigger ones Overspeculation in land & slaves risky Reliance on cotton only Southerners resented North Immigrants primarily stayed in the North
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The White Majority Southern Social System Aristocracy (50 to 100 + slaves) Small Slave Owners (1 to 5 slaves) Slaveless Whites (Poor White Trash, Hillbillies, Clay- eaters) Mountain Whites (Hated Aristocrats & Blacks) Free Blacks Slaves White Trash?
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Free Blacks 1860 – Free blacks in South (250,000) Upper South – Freed during Revolutionary War Deep South – Mulattos Owned property, slaves Had restrictions Jobs, education, voting, testifying Northern blacks unpopular as well Irish hated them "How you find yourself did hot weader Miss Chloe?" "Pretty well I tank you Mr. Cesar[,] only I aspire too much!"
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Plantation Slavery Slave importation banned 1808 Smuggling continued Slave society increases due to natural reproduction Seen as investment Protected them from harm Women who had many children prized Slave auctions Uncle Tom’s Cabin
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Life Under the Lash Hard work, no rights, few protections Beatings not common Forced separation Stable family life First cousins didn’t marry Religion & song mixture of Christian & African hymns Signals & codes
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The Burdens of Bondage Slaves kept downtrodden & illiterate Fought back by Working slow Sabotage Thievery Some poisoned master Gabriel Prosser leads slave revolt in 1800
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Denmark Vesey 1822 – Leads slave rebellion in Charlestown
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Nat Turner Rebellion Led 1831 slave revolt in Virginia Killed over 50 people
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Early Abolitionism 1817 – American Colonization Society Transporting blacks to Africa 1822 – Liberia, Africa 1830s Abolitionism popular Theodore Dwight Weld American Slavery As It Is
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William Lloyd Garrison Boston abolitionist Published the Liberator for 30 yrs Favored Northern secession
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Other Radical Abolitionism Wendell Phillips – Boston, “abolition’s golden trumpet” Refused sugar or cotton cloth David Walker – Black abolitionist Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World, 1829 Wanted war Sojourner Truth Black emancipation Women’s rights
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Frederick Douglas Former slave, author, and abolitionist leader Editor of the North Star Narrative of the Life of Fredrick Douglas Used politics
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The South Lashes Back Southern abolitionists under attack South promotes slavery Religion Civilized them Nutured them Happy lives South’s blacks better off than North’s 1836, “gag resolution” Antislavery appeals had to be tabled
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The Abolitionist Impact in the North Abolitionists unpopular in North Mob violence Garrison Elijah P. Lovejoy South owed North $300 mil North depended on cotton By 1850s, North more willing to listen
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