Title: The Antebellum South
1The South and Slavery
Chapter 10
2Key Topics
- The Domination of southern life by the slave
system - The economic implications of King Cotton
- The Creation of African American communities
under slavery - The Social structure of the white South and its
increasing defensiveness
3Early Emancipation in the North
4Missouri Compromise, 1820
5Antebellum Southern Society
6A fresh start for slavery
- How did cotton production after 1793 transform
the social and political history of the South? - How did the rest of the nation benefit?
- In what ways was it an international phenomenon?
7Characteristics of the Antebellum South
- Primarily agrarian.
- Economic power shifted from the upper South to
the lower South. - Cotton Is King! 1860? 5 mil. bales a yr.
(57 of total US exports). - Very slow development of industrialization.
- Rudimentary financial system.
- Inadequate transportation system.
8Southern Society (1850)
Slavocracyplantation owners
6,000,000
The Plain Folkwhite yeoman farmers
Black Freemen
250,000
Black Slaves3,200,000
Total US Population ? 23,000,0009,250,000 in
the South 40
9Yeoman Farmers
- Who were the Yeoman Farmers?
- What was their interest in slavery?
10Southern Population
11Antebellum Southern Economy
12Graniteville Textile Co.
Founded in 1845, it was the Souths first attempt
at industrialization in Richmond, VA
13Southern Agriculture
14Slaves Picking Cottonon a Mississippi Plantation
15Slaves Using the Cotton Gin
16Changes in Cotton Production
1820
1860
17Value of Cotton Exports As of All US Exports
18The South's "Peculiar Institution"
19Slave Auction Notice, 1823
20Slave Auction Charleston, SC-1856
21Slave Accoutrements
Slave MasterBrands
Slave muzzle
22The Ledger of John White
- Matilda Selby, 9, 400.00 sold to Mr. Covington,
St. Louis, 425.00 - Brooks Selby, 19, 750.00 Left at Home Crazy
- Fred McAfee, 22, 800.00 Sold to
Pepidal,Donaldsonville, 1200.00 - Howard Barnett, 25, 750.00 Ranaway. Sold out of
jail, 540.00 - Harriett Barnett, 17, 550.00 Sold to Davenport
and Jones, Lafourche, 900.00
23Anti-Slave Pamphlet
24Slave Accoutrements
Slave tag, SC
Slave leg irons
Slave shoes
25Antebellum Southern Plantation Life
26Slave-Owning Population (1850)
27Slave-Owning Families (1850)
28Tara Plantation Reality or Myth?
Hollywoods Version?
29A Real Georgia Plantation
30Slaves posing in front of their cabin on a
Southern plantation.
31The Southern Belle
32A Slave Family
33US Laws Regarding Slavery
- U. S. Constitution 3/5s compromise I.2
fugitive slave clause IV.2 - 1793 ? Fugitive Slave Act.
- 1850 ? stronger Fugitive Slave Act.
34Slavery Was Less Efficient in the U. S. than
Elsewhere
- High cost of keeping slaves fromescaping.
- GOAL ? raise the exit cost.
35Slave Resistance Uprisings
36Slave Resistance
- SAMBO pattern of behavior used as a charade in
front of whites the innocent, laughing black man
caricature bulging eyes, thick lips, big smile,
etc..
37Slave Resistance
- Refusal to work hard.
- Isolated acts of sabotage.
- Escape via the Underground Railroad.
38Runaway Slave Ads
39Quilt Patterns as Secret Messages
The Monkey Wrench pattern, on the left, alerted
escapees to gather up tools and prepare to flee
the Drunkard Path design, on the right, warned
escapees not to follow a straight route.
40Slave Rebellions Throughout the Americas
41Slave Rebellions in the Antebellum South
Gabriel Prosser1800
1822
42Slave Rebellions in the Antebellum South
Nat Turner, 1831
43The Culture of Slavery
- Black Christianity Baptists or Methodists
more emotional worship services. negro
spirituals. - Pidgin or Gullah languages.
- Nuclear family with extended kin links,where
possible. - Importance of music in their lives. esp.
spirituals.
44Southern Pro-SlaveryPropaganda