Essential Question: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Essential Question:

Description:

Title: MASTERS AND SLAVES Author: CMU Last modified by: E200203909 Created Date: 6/29/1998 8:07:02 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Manager – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:74
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: cmu79
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Essential Question:


1
  • Essential Question
  • What was life like in the antebellum South?
  • Warm-Up Question
  • Rank order the success of these American
    presidents Jefferson, Madison, Monroe
  • Provide evidence for each

2
The Southern Antebellum Economy King Cotton
Slavery
Ante means before
Bellum means the war
3
The Rise of King Cotton
Southern cotton fueled both the English
American Industrial Revolutions
  • King Cotton was the dynamic force driving the
    American economy from 1790-1840
  • The South provided ¾ of worlds cotton
  • Southern cotton stimulated the growth of Northern
    textile industry, shipping, marketing
  • Slave population grew 300

4
The Value of Cotton Exports as a Percentage of
All U.S. Exports
5
The Rise of King Cotton
  • The introduction of short-staple cotton
    strengthened the economy
  • Cotton could now be grown anywhere in the South
  • The cotton gin (1793) made seed extraction easy
  • The potential for profits led to a cotton boom
    the expansion of slavery in the South

Southern way of life
White Southerners perceived their economic
interests to be tied to slavery
6
Slaves Using the Cotton Gin
7
Southern Agriculture
Cotton expansion led to Alabama Fever
from 1816 to 1820
Southern expansion boomed again from 1832 to 1838
into Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas
and again in the mid-1850s into Texas
8
Slave Concentration, 1820
Slave Concentration by 1860
The Black Belt
9
The Internal Slave Trade
  • The Upper South grew tobacco was less dependent
    on cotton slave labor
  • As slave prices rose, Upper South developed an
    internal slave trade to provide surplus slaves
    to the Lower South
  • Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky began to take on
    characteristics of the industrializing North
    became divided in their support of slavery

10
Slavery in a Changing World
  • Antebellum regional differences
  • By 1820, all Northern states abolished slavery
  • The South lagged behind the North in cities,
    industry, railroads
  • Southern population grew slower than in the North
    West

The South lagged by choice because these were
risky investments, but cotton was safe
Southern politicians feared being permanently
outvoted in Congress
By 1860, only 15 of U.S. factories were in the
South
By 1860, only 35 of railroads were in the South
11
Antebellum Southern SocietyWhites
12
The Divided Society of the Old South
  • American slavery was deeply rooted in the
    Southern economy but slavery divided the South
  • By casteblack or white
  • By classownership of slaves
  • By regionslavery was more deeply entrenched
    along the Black Belt from GA to TX

13
Southern Society in 1850
Slave-ocracy(plantation owners)
6,000,000
The Plain Folk(small slave-owners yeoman
farmers)
250,000
Black Freemen
3,200,000
Black Slaves
U.S. population in 1850 was 23,000,0009,500,000
lived in the South (40)
14
Southern White Class Structure, 1860
15
White Society in South
  • Only a small percentage of whites owned large
    plantations
  • Less than 1 of the white population owned 50
    slaves
  • Most whites were yeomen farmers who supported
    slavery because they hired slaves or felt
    reassured that there was a lower class than them

16
Small Slaveholders
  • Only about 25 of the Southern white population
    owned slaves
  • 88 of slave owners had fewer than 20 slaves
    (most 1-2 slaves)
  • But slave conditions were worse because slaves
    shared their master's poverty
  • Most slaves would have preferred the economic
    stability kinship of the plantation

17
If these were the living conditions for slaves on
a plantation, what were conditions like on small
farms?
18
Yeomen Farmers
  • About 75 of Southern whites were small, yeoman
    farmers who did not own slaves
  • Most yeomen resented the aristocratic planters
    but hoped to become wealthy planters
  • Many saw slavery as a way of keeping blacks in
    their place
  • Many saw abolition as a threat to their Southern
    way of life

19
Antebellum Southern SocietySlaves
20
The World of Southern Blacks
  • While very few whites were plantation owners,
    most slaves lived on plantations
  • 90 of slaves lived on farms in which owner had
    20 slaves
  • 15 of slaves served as house slaves (domestic
    servants)
  • 10 of slaves worked in industry, lumbering,
    construction

2.4 of slaves worked on large plantations with
200 slaves
21
Distribution of Slave Labor, 1850
22
50 of all slaves lived in the Black Belt
(Cotton Belt)
23
Slaves Picking Cottonon a Mississippi Plantation
Hauling the Whole Weeks PickingsWilliam Henry
Brown, 1842
24
Slaves Workingin a Sugar-Boiling House, 1823
Some slaves could hire out their overtime hours
for pay (Underground Economy)
25
Slave Families Community
  • Normal family life was difficult
  • Families were vulnerable to breakup by their
    masters
  • On large plantations, slaves were able to retain
    their African cultures were mostly part of
    two-parent families
  • But on smaller farms, extended families provided
    support or adoption of unrelated slaves

26
A Slave Family
27
African American Religion
  • Black Christianity was the center of
    African-American culture
  • Richard Allen created African Methodist Episcopal
    (AME) Church but was largely composed of free
    urban African-Americans
  • On plantations, whites supervised religious
    messages, but the real slave religion was
    practiced at night in secret preached about the
    inevitable day of liberation

28
Supervised Plantation Religion
29
Free Blacks in the Old South
  • Southern free blacks were severely restricted
  • Had to register with the state carry freedom
    papers
  • Were excluded from certain jobs
  • Subjected to re-enslavement fraudulent
    recapture
  • By 1860 some states proposed laws to force free
    blacks to leave the state or be enslaved

30
Defending Slavery?
31
Defending Slavery
  • Southern planters feared revolts the growth of
    abolitionism used a new defense slavery
  • It was sanctioned in the Bible
  • Constitution did not prohibit it
  • Slavery was a natural way of life for
    inferior Africans
  • Slavery was more humane than Northern industrial
    exploitation

32
Pro-Slavery Propaganda
33
Defending Slavery
  • Proslavery Southerners protected South against
    anti-slavery ideas
  • Feared abolitionist propaganda would inspire
    slave rebellions or inspire the yeoman to support
    abolition
  • Increased restrictions on blacks by making it
    illegal to teach slaves to read write
  • Banned church services meetings without
    supervision

34
Slavery in the NorthEarly Emancipation Movements
In 1787, the Articles of Confederation outlawed
slavery in the northwest
By 1804, nine states emancipated slaves or
adopted gradual emancipation plans
Before the American Revolution, slaves were
present in each of the 13 American colonies
In 1817, a group of ministers politicians
formed the American Colonization Society to
resettle free blacks in West Africa
In 1808, the USA Britain in outlawed the
African slave trade
35
Anti-Slave Arguments
Leg Irons
Slave ID Tag
Slave muzzle
36
Resistance Rebellion
  • The most common form of slave rebellion was
    passive resistance
  • Work slowdowns sabotage
  • Poisoning of masters
  • Running away was common among slaves Runaway
    slaves were aided by the Underground Railroad

37
Quilt Patterns Showed Secret Messages
The Drunkard Path design warned escapees not to
follow a straight route
The Monkey Wrench pattern told slaves to gather
up tools and prepare to flee
38
Resistance and Rebellion
At the last minute, the plan failed, Prosser was
captured, no whites died
  • Between 1800-1831, 3 major slave revolts
    occurred
  • Gabriel Prosser (1800) planned a violent march on
    Richmond
  • Denmark Vesey (1822) created an extensive plot to
    arm free slaves in SC (no white deaths)
  • Nat Turner (1831) led a band of slaves from farm
    to farm killed 60 whites

A change discovery revealed the plot no whites
died
39
Slave Rebellions in the SouthNat Turner,
1831
40
Conclusions Worlds in Conflict
41
Conclusions
  • The post-1793 cotton boom transformed the
    American economy Southern society
  • Cotton facilitated westward expansion the
    entrenchment of African slavery in the South
  • In the 1830s, the South became increasingly
    defensive about perceived Northern attempts to
    end slavery

42
Discussion Questions
  • How did American agriculture change from the
    colonial era to the Era of Good Feelings?
  • Which early 19th century change will have the
    greater impact on American history Eli Whitneys
    cotton gin OR Jeffersons Louisiana Purchase?
    Explain
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com