Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNathen Sowle Modified over 9 years ago
1
Slavery in the United States
2
Learning Targets I can trace the development of the slave system in the United States. I can evaluate resistance and opposition to slavery before the Civil War. I can evaluate the causes, conduct, and consequences of the Civil War.
3
Review First Africans in 1619 Transition from indentured servitude after Bacon’s Rebellion (1676) Middle Passage & Triangle Trade Slave codes Diff. b/w N & S – Geography – Economies
4
Review Problems at the Constitutional Convention – Three Fifths Compromise – Congress could illegalize the slave trade in 1808 Northwest Ordinances (1787) By 1804, all Northern states had illegalized slavery or planned for gradual emancipation. 1808, slave trade b/c illegal.
5
1793
6
Review Missouri Statehood Crisis (1819) Nullification Crisis (1832)
7
The Antebellum South
8
Border States: Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri Middle South: Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas Deep South/Lower South: South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas In general, the farther south, the greater the dependence on slavery.
9
The Antebellum South Why, if there are relatively few slave holders, is the South so committed to slavery? – Controlled by the Planter Aristocracy Less education in the South Huge gap between the wealthy and the rest – The more nuanced answer Aspirations of underclasses Interdependence of classes
10
Cultural Differences North Economic diversity Larger middle class and greater social mobility Ethnic & religious diversity More education Intellectual movements – Enlightenment – Transcendentalism – Reform movements Still racist South Economy cash crop dependent Discouraged immigration Aristocratic tradition Less ethnic & religious diversity Military tradition & southern chivalry
11
The Peculiar Institution Over time, the South becomes more culturally isolated and more defensive of slavery. From necessary evil to its “peculiar institution” – Haitian Revolt – American Revolution – Most countries, including B & F, illegalized slavery – Emergence of Abolition Defense of slavery – Historical arguments – Biblical arguments – “Scientific” arguments – Economic arguments
12
Opposition and Resistance Among slaves – Developed unique African-American culture – Resistance was most often subtle Revolts – Stono Rebellion (1739): SC, 21w, 44b – Denmark Vesey (1822): SC, planned an uprising, ratted out, he and 30 others hanged – Nat Turner’s Revolt (1831): Virginia, 60 whites killed
13
The Growth of Abolition First among Quakers during Revolutionary Era American Colonization Society (1817) – Liberia 1822; 15,000 over 40 years William Lloyd Garrison, The Liberator (1831) Fredrick Douglas, Narrative (1845) NOT a majority movement
14
So what does happen in the North? Slavery illegalized, but northerners are still racist Belief that slavery might compete with free labor Northerners resent Southern power – Virginia Dynasty – 3/5ths Compromise Northerners fear spread of slavery, especially after Mexican Cession
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.