Title: CHAPTER 13: LIFE IN THE NORTH AND SOUTH (1789-1860)
1CHAPTER 13 LIFE IN THE NORTH AND
SOUTH(1789-1860)
SHARLANA, SORINA, ARYELLE, ALIVIA, AND JADA
2Vocabulary
- factory- a building or group of buildings where
goods are manufactured. - Textile- a type of cloth or woven fabric.
- Mass production- the production of large
quantities that are a standardized article. - Interchangeable parts- Identical parts that are
used for practical purposes.
- Cotton gin- a machine used for separating cotton
from its seeds. - Planter- a manager or owner of a plantation.
- Spiritual- pertaining to, or consisting of
spirit. - Underground Railroad- a secret network for
helping slaves escape from the south to the north
and Canada in the years before the American Civil
War.
3chapter 13 Section 1The industrial revolution
4Main Idea A The Industrial Revolution changed
the way Americans manufactured goods.
- American colonists earned their living by farming
before the Revolutionary War. Some workers were
blacksmiths and storekeepers, that lived in
towns. They sold goods that farmers couldnt
produce for themselves. - There were no factories, but then the Industrial
Revolution began in Britain in the late 1700s.
Special machines were invented for the textile
industry, which allowed the British factories to
spin and weave at fast speeds. Britain wanted to
keep these methods a secret, which made them pass
laws to prevent the export of their machines and
to stop textile workers from leaving. - However, the New England states were developing
their own textile industry by the 1790s and the
American investors offered rewards to people that
would help them build textile factories.
5Continue.
- In 1789, a man named Samuel Slater slipped out of
Great Britain and came to the United States. He
worked for Moses Brown and used his memory to
make a cotton-spinning machine and helped Moses
Brown build a textile factory. This started the
American Industrial Revolution and helped make
New England the first manufacturing region in the
U.S. - The factories increased during the war of 1812,
which kept British imports from entering the U.S.
It also increased because of the Tariff of 1816
and the Americans began making more of their own
goods. - A Boston merchant named Francis Lowell had an
idea that one factory could include all the steps
needed to make a product and would increase time
and profits. He then built a textile factory in
Waltham, Massachusetts. - Lowell also established a new labor systems,
which included women. The women worked in the
factory to wove clothing and made more money than
they earned in farm labor. They lived together in
dormitories and the company offered religious
instruction, education, and entertainment. The
new labor systems also allowed women to produce
their own magazine.
6Main Idea B Eli Whitneys inventions improved
manufacturing
- During the undeclared war between the U.S and
France in the 1790s, there was not enough muskets
in the U.S. The muskets weren't alike and if one
broke, it would have to be repaired by a skilled
worker. Eli Whitney designed a machine to make
the musket parts identical and could fit in any
gun. Therefore, the parts wouldnt have to be
made by skilled workers and made it cheaper,
faster, and easier to produce. Whitneys idea was
soon applied to other objects. - The reasons for Northern Industrial Growths
- The southern economy was based on agriculture
which they sold to northern states and other
countries - The North had a larger population and more
factory workers - The North had better transportation systems
- The banking system in the North was more advanced
- Immigrants from Europe came to the North and
fueled the labor supplies
7Main Idea C The early 1800s was a time of
improvements in transportation, daily life, and
communication
- The industry required raw materials to be shipped
to different places, which resulted as a better
need for transportation. Henry Clays American
System created new canals, roads, and railroads.
This made costs for moving goods decline and in
the 1800s, there were new roads and turnpikes
that made moving goods easier. The first
steam-operated railway for passengers and
freight, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, began
operating in 1830. Canals were also built. - In 1807, Robert Fulton sailed the Clermont, which
was the first successful steamboat, on the Hudson
River from N.Y.C. to Albany. His trip was less
time than a horse drawn wagon. In the 1840s, more
advanced ships were created and were quicker. - The Industrial Revolution was fueled by many new
inventions, which helped farmers. The mechanical
reaper was invented by Cyrus McCormick in 1831, a
lightweight steel plow was invented by John Deer
in 1837, and the first telegraph was invented by
Samuel F.B. Morse and completed in 1844.
8CHAPTER 13 LESSON 2 COTTON IS KING
9COTTON IS KING
- I. ELI WHITNEYS INVENTION A.
- Cotton was grown as a cash crop during the
1600s. - Cotton had both positive and negative aspect.
- The positive aspect was it was made into
- comfortable clothing.
- The negative aspect was sticky green seeds were
- attached to the cotton and had to be removed
before it was used. - B. BEGINNINGS OF COTTON FARMING IN THE UNITED
- STATES
- The first American cotton crops were harvested on
farms located on southern islands off the
Atlantic coast. - Inland cotton (formally known as short staple
cotton) contained sticky green seeds that had to
be removed. - An abundant amount of labor was required to
removed the sticky green seeds. As a result, the
cost of cotton grew and it became more expensive
10COTTON IS KING
- I.C. ELI WHITNEY MAKES A DIFFERENCE
- Eli Whitney, the inventor who came up with
interchangeable parts, learned of the cotton
cleaning problem in 1792. - Whitney studied older machines designed to clean
cotton. He realized they did not work well
because they grounded the seeds into the cotton
fibers. - In 1793, Whitney improved the machines by placing
a wooden cylinder covered in metal spikes into a
box full of cotton. A hand crank was used to turn
the cylinder. The spikes hooked onto the fibers
and pulled them through narrow slots where the
seeds could not pass. - This machine was called the cotton gin.
- The average machine cleaned 10 lbs. of cotton per
day larger models produced over half a ton of
cotton a day (1,000) - interchangeable parts-identical parts that can
be substituted for each other. - cotton gin- a machine that removed seeds from
cotton fibers.
11COTTON IS KING
- II. THE COTTON INDUSTRY A.
- Farmers in the South wished to grow cotton to
share the profit. - Cotton was more and more in demand at Northern
cotton mills and British cotton mills. - Cotton growing spread from as far west as Texas
and north into Virginia. This area was known as
the Cotton Kingdom. - B. GROWTH OF THE COTTON KINGDOM
- Large amounts of money to be made in cotton had
important effects on the South. - In the coastal states of Georgia and South
Carolina , cotton was a primary crop. - Planters moved into lands that had belonged to
previous Native American group in search of newer
and better cotton growing lands. - Cotton was a major cash crop in Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, and Texas by the
1830s. - The textile industry in the New England states
developed rapidly because the South supplied it
with more and more cotton. - Each cotton bale weighed 500 lbs. 4 million
were produced every year by 1860
12MAP OF THE COTTON KINGDOM
13COTTON IS KING
- II.C. A TARIFF DIVIDES THE NATION
- The British textile industry was in need of the
American cotton, so ships carried it across the
Atlantic Ocean. - Southerners were unhappy about the tariff policy
because they depended on the imports from Great
Britain. - The high tariff that protected Northern factories
raised the prices on goods Southerners bought
from other countries. - Northerners argued that the high tariff was
needed to allow the industries to grow.
14COTTON IS KING
- III. THE PLANTATION SYSTEM A.
- Cotton profit led to the expansion of
- the plantation system in the South.
- The first Virginia plantations produced tobacco.
- South Carolina plantations produced rice and
indigo. - Louisiana plantations produced sugar cane.
- Cotton grew more often due to the invention of
- the cotton gin.
- B. BEGINNINGS OF THE PLANTATION SYSTEM
- Planters were responsible for producing and
selling cotton from his land. - Planters purchased their own supplies.
- Planters on average owned over 20 slaves. Most
planters however could only afford less than 10
slaves and had the help of an overseer. - Many people thought slavery was key in planter
life.
15CHAPTER 13LESSON 3
16Main Idea A Slavery In the United States
- -Introduction
- By the time of the Revolutionary War, slavery had
almost disappeared. Religious groups in the
northern colonies such as the Quakers had
detested slavery. - -Slavery and the Law.
- About half the slaves in the South worked on
plantations. They produced cotton, tobacco, sugar
cane, and other crops. - One fourth of southern white families owned
slaves. - Enslaved African Americans had no basic rights of
freedom. Only white, U.S citizens were the only
ones able of gaining their basic rights.
17ContinueMain Idea A.
- The Importance of cotton.
- In the south cotton had become a principle crop.
They called it King Cotton. - The cotton gin allowed farmers to produce more
cotton, so they planted bigger crops. - The invention of the cotton gin had changed the
ideas about slavery in the South. - Many people thought that slaves were needed as
the cotton gin invention spread. They also
thought that the workers would satisfy the King
Cotton. - Many people in the South believed thought that
only slave workers could provide enough workers
to satisfy King Cotton.
18Main Idea B Life Under Slavery
- Work for enslaved people.
- Enslaved African Americans had to wake up early
for work. - Women had to do chores such as cooking, cleaning,
and washing clothes. Men were carpenters,
painters, shoemakers or at other jobs. - Most enslaved people had longer and harder tasks.
- Most enslaved people had to working hours in the
fields. Men, women and children older than ten
had to do back-breaking chores, grow cotton,
sugar cane, tobacco and other crops in the fields.
19ContinueMain Idea B.
- -No freedom
- The lack of freedom and the threat of punishment
were facts of life for enslaved African
Americans. - Slaveholders had the legal right to inflict
physical punishment on slaves. - They were able to use whips or force slaves to
work while wearing leg irons. - -Family Life and Culture
- Most Africans Americans couldt marry because it
wasnt recognized by the law. - On plantations, families often lived together but
they lived in fear of being traded or sold off
away from loved ones. - Enslaved African Americans often lived in small
cabins with their family. - Enslaved people shared many things with each
other mostly their culture. - They expressed themselves through storytelling,
dancing and art. - Slaves expressed their beliefs through religious
songs called spirituals.
20Main Idea C Resistance to Slavery
- -Introduction
- In the South, many African Americans were forced
to live out their lives as slaves. Some rebelled
and some escaped to be closer to family. - -The Secret Network
- The Underground Railroad was created in the
1830s. - The secret routes led to northern states or other
countries such as Cuba, México, Canada, or the
Bahamas. - There were stationaries for the slaves to hid,
rest, and sleep. - The conductors would help guide slaves to
safety. Some conductors were former slaves them
selves. - Slaves were willing to risk great dangers so they
can escape the terrible fate they received as a
slave.
21UNDERGROUND RAILROAD 1860
22ContinueMain idea C.
- -Slave Rebellions
- Only few of the slaves decided to resist slavery.
- The best known rebellion of slaves and planters
was known as Turners Rebellion. It was led by
Nat Turner, in Virginia in 1831. The rebellion
failed, and Turner was hung. - The first rebellion was Gabriels Uprising. The
group was led by Gabriel Prosser, they tried to
take over Richmond, Virginia, in 1800. Prosser
and followers were executed. - In 1822, Denmark Vesey, a free African American
man revolted, but ended up being executed. - After a few revolts planters and others in the
South were afraid of slave uprisings. - After Turners Rebellion many stricter slave
codes were past. Slaves couldnt hunt with guns,
they could not play music, also night patrols
were formed to prevent the meetings of enslaved
African Americans.