THE SOUTH AND THE SLAVERY CONTROVERSY, 1793-1860 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

THE SOUTH AND THE SLAVERY CONTROVERSY, 1793-1860

Description:

Title: Slide 1 Author: John Steere Last modified by: Hamilton, Lisa Created Date: 7/12/2006 4:53:50 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:121
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: JohnSt302
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: THE SOUTH AND THE SLAVERY CONTROVERSY, 1793-1860


1
THE SOUTH AND THE SLAVERY CONTROVERSY, 1793-1860
  • Chapter 16

2
Cotton is King
  • In 1787 many in both south and the north thought
    that slavery was on its way out.
  • Reasons?
  • Impact of Eli Whitneys cotton gin.
  • Short-staple cotton
  • Seeds no longer removed by hand

3
King Cotton
  • Cotton becomes dominant cash crop in south,
    especially in the gulf bottom lands.
  • Southern planters buy new land and slaves
    aggressively
  • Northern shippers make big profits shipping.
  • Britain highly dependent on American cotton.
  • Britains most important product in the 1850s was
    cotton cloth.
  • About 75 of its cotton came from US.
  • 1/5th of Britains workers directly or indirectly
    got livelihood from cotton processing.

4
Southern Cotton Production, 1860
5
Changes in Cotton Production
1820
1860
6
The Planter Aristocracy
  • Before the Civil War planter aristocracy controls
    government in the South.
  • Planter Aristocracy at the top.
  • 1850, only 1733 families owned more than 100
    slaves.
  • Cream of the political and social leadership.
  • Owned the lions share of the wealth.
  • System slowed economic development.
  • Why?

7
Slaves Of The Slave System
  • Problems with plantation system
  • Raped the land
  • Economy was monopolistic
  • System was economically unstable
  • Led to a dangerous dependence on one crop
  • South lacked diversity

8
Slave-Owning Population (1850)
  • Below the 1733 leading families were the less
    wealthy slave owners. 345,000 families
    representing 1.7 Mill people in 1850.
  • Over 2/3 owned fewer than 10 slaves.
  • Maj. of whites didnt own slaves

9
Whites Without Slaves
  • Majority
  • Mostly subsistence farmers on poorer land
  • Bottom of group Poor white trash, rednecks,
    crackers
  • Had no stake in the slave economy, but were some
    of the strongest supporters of the system
  • Why?
  • Mountain whites very poor, resented slavery,
    Hillbillies

10
Stay on Course
11
Free Blacks Slaves Without Masters
  • By 1860 there were about 250,000 free blacks
  • Societies attitude toward them.
  • Risk of being high-jacked back into slavery.
  • Attitude in the North
  • Northern v. Southern view of blacks

12
Plantation Slavery
  • 4 Mill. black slaves
  • Basement of southern society.
  • Numbers had quadrupled since 1800.
  • Important source of wealth
  • Stagnated the southern economy.
  • Slave population moved south as prime cotton land
    shifted to the Deep South.
  • Slave population in states.

13
Southern Population (1860)
14
Distribution of Slaves, 1860
15
Slave Life
  • Not much fun
  • Hard work, ignorance and oppression
  • No political or legal rights.
  • Floggings common
  • Many places illegal to teach them to read.
  • Slave-breakers.
  • By 1860 most slaves concentrated in the Deep
    South.

16
Slave Rebellions
  • Were slave rebellions, but never successful.
    Often informed upon by other slaves.
  • 1800 Gabriel in Richmond
  • Denmark Vesey, Charleston in 1822.
  • Most famous was rebellion by Nat Turner in Va. in
    1831.
  • Significance

17
Early Abolition
  • Early abolitionism. Quakers.
  • American Colonization Society (1817)
  • Liberia. 15000 freed blacks transported to Africa
  • Why dont more American Blacks go back to Africa?.

18
Growth of Abolition
  • In the 1830s abolitionist turned into a crusade.
  • Why?
  • Theodore Dwight Weldearly Abolitionist preacher.
  • Lyman Beecher, head of Lane Theological Seminary,
    hotbed of early abolitionism. Very influential
    and father of
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Henry Ward Beecher
  • Catharine Beecher

19
Radical Abolition
  • 1831 William Lloyd Garrison burst onto the scene.
    young
  • His view on slavery.
  • Published militant abolitionist magazine The
    Liberator.
  • Founded the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833.

20
Black Abolitionists
  • Sojourner Truth
  • David WalkerMilitant.
  • Frederick Douglas
  • Greatest of the Black abolitionists
  • escaped from bondage in 1838 at 21.
  • Protégé of Garrison

Frederick Douglas
21
The South Lashes Back
  • Before 1830
  • More anti-slavery societies in south than north
  • Southerners openly debated merits of slavery.
  • After 1830 debate in South ends and many
    southerners defend as positive good. What
    changed?
  • Nat Turners rebellion in 1831
  • Nullification Crisis
  • Reaction to Northern criticism
  • Southern preachers arguing that slavery supported
    by Bible

22
The Abolitionist Impact In The North
  • Abolitionists were not particularly popular in
    the North for some time. Why?
  • North had heavy stake in the cotton of the south.
  • Textile mills relied on southern cotton.
  • Many northerners feared political controversy.
  • Many northern politicians carefully distanced
    themselves from the abolitionists.
  • Abolitionists harrassed
  • Yet, by 1850 abolitionism had gained strength and
    taken root as a popular cause.

23
End of Chapter
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com