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Chapter 13 Section 3
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In the South, cotton was the region’s leading export Dependent on the slave system
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American mills along with British mills used raw cotton to manufacture cloth. Southern planters could not keep up with the demand for cotton Removing the seeds from the cotton was a slow process
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Eli Whitney developed the cotton gin which removed seeds from raw cotton Did the work of 50 people cleaning the cotton by hand Planters could now grow cotton for a huge profit
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Planters found that soil wore out if planted with cotton year after year Planters began to move West The cotton kingdom extended in a wide ban from South Carolina to Texas
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As the cotton kingdom spread so did slavery Slaves planted and picked the cotton, planters used huge profits to buy more land and more slaves After 1807 slave trade with Africa was illegal Planters bought slaves from planters in the southeast ▪ Sales broke up families
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The South lagged behind the North in manufacturing Rich planters invested their money in land and slaves rather than factories
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The South depended on the North and Europe for goods such as cloth, furniture and tools
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Section 4
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Grand estates with vast plantation did exist in the South Most white southerners were not rich and owned no slaves
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A planter was someone who owned at least 20 slaves 1860 there were about 2 million white families Total of 50,000 were families of planters called “cottoncracy”
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Rich planters built elaborate homes filled with expensive European furniture Dressed and behaved like European nobility Many planters became political leaders Planters hired overseers to manage the work of slaves
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plain folk” owned the land they farmed and maybe one or two slaves Worked alongside their slaves in the cotton fields
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They did not own the land they farmed They rented it, paying the owner with part of the crop Despite hard life poor whites enjoyed rights denied to all slaves
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Free and enslaved African Americans lived in the South
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Most free blacks living in the South were descendents of slaves freed during and after the Revolutionary War 1860, 200,000 free African Americans lived in the South Most in Maryland and Delaware Slave owners did not like free African Americans living in the South ▪ Encouraged slaves to rebel
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Slave owners justified slavery on the basis that African Americans could not take care of themselves Southern states passed laws that made life harder for free African Americans Not allowed to vote or to travel
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Made up 1/3of the South’s population by 1860 Cleared new land, planted and harvested crops Children helped By teen age years they worked between 12 and 14 hours a day
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Some became skilled laborers Carpenters, blacksmiths Earnings belonged to their owners Older slaves worked as house servants Cooked, cleaned, and took care of children
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Slave codes were passed to keep slaves from running away or rebelling Forbidden to gather in groups of more than three Could not leave their owners land without a pass Not allowed to own guns
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Crime to learn how to read or write So they could use maps or read train schedules Did not have the right to testify in court Not able to bring charges against owners that abused them
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Life varied from plantation to plantation “work work work” Slaves worked long hard days
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Hard for enslaved African Americans to keep their families together Law did not recognize slave marriages Owners could sell a husband and wife to different buyers
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On large plantation many enslaved families managed to stay together Parents taught children traditional African stories and songs Used folk tales to pass on their history and moral beliefs
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Enslaved African Americans were devout Christians Spirituals song by African Americans reflected this string of hope Popular American music would develop from African American spirituals Jazz, blues, and rock n roll
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A few African Americans used violence Denmark Vessy planned a revolt in 1822 He and 35 other people were executed
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1831, Nat Turner, an African American preacher, led a major revolt Led his followers through Virginia killing more than 57 whites ▪ Whites hunted the countryside for Turner ▪ Killing many innocent African Americans before catching Turner Turner’s revolt increased Southern fears of an uprising
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