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Geography of the north in the 1800's?. Humid, warm summers, cold winters. Rocky soil, infertile land, rushing rivers, lots of bays and inlets, heavily forested. Southern geography ?. Mild winters, long hot humid summers. Wide, slow moving rivers. Excellent broad plains to grow crops.
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Humid, warm summers, cold winters. Rocky soil, infertile land, rushing rivers, lots of bays and inlets, heavily forested.
Mild winters, long hot humid summers. Wide, slow moving rivers. Excellent broad plains to grow crops.
Shipping, manufacturing of textiles, lumber, furs and mining.
Agriculture. Crops grown were cotton, rice, tobacco, indigo and sugar cane. The invention of the cotton gin increased the growing of cotton and slave labor.
Free labor (free to choose your work and paid for work). Many immigrants worked in factories.
Largely slave labor. 1/4 of the land was owned by wealthy plantation owner and 3/4 was worked by small yeomen farmers.
Northern European immigrants:German and Irish. The overall population grew from 5 million to 31 million from 1800-1860.
Europeans of English, Scottish descent and enslaved Africans and African Americans. In 1860 the population was 12 million in the South, 1/3 being slaves.
The cities became manufacturing centers. They were crowded but offered art, theater, museums and libraries and education.
Small towns, less cultured leisure. Few large cities along rivers.
Theater, arts, education, ( mostly for boys )churches, dancing, card playing and theater
Dancing, cards, fox hunting, horse racing. Wealthy educated through home schooling - mostly boys.
Labor intensive crops of rice, tobacco and cotton grew well on southern land; slavery protectedin US Constitution and state Constitutions; rationalized as an economic necessity.