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Chapter 13- The South. The SOUTH’S ECONOMY. COTTON WAS KING Colonial times (rice, indigo, tobacco) Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin Upper South- corn, tobacco, wheat, hemp, and vegetables (MD, VA, NC) Deep South- COTTON …rice and sugarcane in some areas (GA, SC, AL, MS, LA, TX, FL).
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The SOUTH’S ECONOMY • COTTON WAS KING • Colonial times (rice, indigo, tobacco) • Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin • Upper South- corn, tobacco, wheat, hemp, and vegetables (MD, VA, NC) • Deep South- COTTON …rice and sugarcane in some areas (GA, SC, AL, MS, LA, TX, FL)
Industry in the South • very little industry • barriers to industry 1. Cotton was so profitable 2. lack of capital 3. small market for manufactured goods 4. They didn’t want it • William Gregg (textile mill) and Anderson (Tredegar Iron Works) • SPOILER ALERT!!!!...SOUTH’S LACK OF INDUSTRY WOULD HAVE DISASTEROUS EFFECTS IN THE UPCOMING WAR
Transportation in the South • Natural waterways provided the chief means of transporting goods • few canals…poor roads • Most cities were along rivers • railroad lines were short and local and did not connect all parts of a regions • SPOILER ALERT!!!...THE RAILWAY SHORTAGE WOULD ALSO HAVE A DISASTEROUS EFFECT DURING THE UPCOMING CIVIL WAR
Do you think there is a correlation (relationship) between the fact that the South shunned industry and its lack of railroads? Explain your answer.
The SOUTH’S PEOPLE • most white Southerners owned no slaves or only a few. Only 1/3 of families owned any slaves at all. • YEOMAN FARMERS - small farmers that no slaves or held a few slaves but worked along side them in the field - largest group of whites - owned their own land (avg. 100 acres) - mostly in the Upper South or hilly regions of the Deep South
THE SOUTH’S PEOPLE • TENANT FARMERS (not in your book) - rented and work land on landlord’s estates • RURAL POOR (“hillbillies”) - lived in crude cabins in wooded areas - small garden, pig or cow, hunted and fished
The poor people of the rural South were stubbornly independent • refused to take any “slave” work • looked down on by other whites they were proud of being self-sufficient
THE SOUTH’S PEOPLE…PLANTATIONS • A large plantation might cover several thousand acres • plantation owners measured their wealth by the number of slaves they owned and by the “grandness” of their possessions • Only about 4% of plantation owners owned more than 20 slaves…most plantation owners had fewer than 10
Plantation Owners Wives • watched over domestic servants and took care of sick slaves • supervised the buildings and fruit and vegetable gardens • Some worked as accountants for the plantation • Often led lonely lives as their husbands were often away from home
Work on the Plantation • DOMESTIC SLAVES (worked in the house, cleaning, cooking, laundry, sewing, serving meals) • SKILLED SLAVES (blacksmiths, carpenters, shoemakers, weavers, etc.) • FIELD HANDS- most enslaved people worked in the fields…from sunrise to sunset + • OVERSEER- the plantation manager, supervised the slaves
LIFE UNDER SLAVERY • slaves had few comforts beyond the bare necessities • slaves faced uncertainty and danger - sold away or family broken up - slave marriages not legally recognized (“jumping the broom”…til death or separation do us part) • extended family (relatives and friends) to provide stability
African- American Culture • fused African and American elements into a new culture • held onto Africa customs (songs and dance, folk stories, religion, dress) • Passed these traditions on to their children • Many A-A adopted Christianity as a religion of hope and resistance • spirituals provided for secret communication and combined the Christian faith with earthly suffering
African- American Culture • fused African and American elements into a new culture • held onto Africa customs (songs and dance, folk stories, religion, dress) • Passed these traditions on to their children • Many A-A adopted Christianity as a religion of hope and resistance • spirituals provided for secret communication and combined the Christian faith with earthly suffering
RESISTANCE TO SLAVERY • Some slaves openly rebelled against their masters • Nat Turner led one such rebellion in Virginia (1831) • Turner and his followers killed 55 whites before their capture • Even more severe slave codes were passed • Generally, resistance was in the forms of pretending to be ill, work slow downs, breaking tools, setting fire to buildings • Resistance helped slaves endure the cruelty of slavery by striking back at their masters in sometimes subtle ways
ESCAPING SLAVERY • Some enslaved A-A tried to escape slavery by running away to the North • Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass, two A-A leaders, were both born into slavery and escaped to freedom. • Escaping from the Deep South states was almost impossible. • Most slaves who successfully escaped were from the Upper South
Escaping Slavery • The UNDERGROUND RAILROAD, a network of “safe houses” owned by free blacks and whites who opposed slavery, offered assistance to runaway slaves. • Some slaves ran away to find relatives or to escape punishment. Rarely did they plan to make a run for the North • Most were captured and returned to their owners. Discipline was severe…usually in the form of whipping.
Whites justification for slavery • in the Bible • “natural” superiority of whites • “cradle to the grave” argument
Southern City Life • South’s largest cities (1860) Baltimore (212,000) New Orleans (168,000) • With the coming of the railroads, many cities grew as RR crossroads (Atlanta, Chattanooga, Montgomery, Jackson, Columbia)
Southern City Life • South’s largest cities (1860) Baltimore (212,000) New Orleans (168,000) • With the coming of the railroads, many cities grew as RR crossroads (Atlanta, Chattanooga, Montgomery, Jackson, Columbia)