1 / 26

The Missouri Compromise provided that Missouri be admitted as a slave state, Maine be admitted as a free state, and

The Missouri Compromise provided that Missouri be admitted as a slave state, Maine be admitted as a free state, and all of the Louisiana Territory north of the northern boundary of Missouri be closed to slavery. all of the Louisiana Territory north of 36 °30’ be closed to slavery.

petula
Download Presentation

The Missouri Compromise provided that Missouri be admitted as a slave state, Maine be admitted as a free state, and

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Missouri Compromise provided that Missouri be admitted as a slave state, Maine be admitted as a free state, and • all of the Louisiana Territory north of the northern boundary of Missouri be closed to slavery. • all of the Louisiana Territory north of 36°30’ be closed to slavery. • the entire Louisiana Territory be open to slavery. • the lands south of 36°30’ be guaranteed to slavery and the lands north of it negotiable. • all of the Louisiana Territory north of the southern boundary of Missouri be closed to slavery for 30 years.

  2. Examine your assigned documents: • What do you know? (facts derived from the document) • What can you infer? (conclusions, connections, significance) • Please write the information on your own paper. Slavery Document Activity

  3. The Slavery Argument

  4. Was slavery more of a burden or a benefit to Antebellum America? Antebellum South

  5. Characteristics 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.

  6. Southern Society (1850) “Slavocracy”[plantation owners] 6,000,000 The “Plain Folk”[white yeoman farmers] Black Freemen 250,000 Black Slaves3,200,000 Total US Population --> 23,000,000[9,250,000 in the South = 40%]

  7. Southern Population (1860)

  8. Slave-Owning Families (1850)

  9. Cotton • Invention of cotton gin made cotton the staple Southern crop. • Northern merchants and textile mills, as well as Europe, depended on Southern cotton production – King Cotton. • By 1840, 50% of U.S. export profits were from cotton. • Demand for cotton = demand for slaves.

  10. Southern Economy • Agricultural focus produced unstable economy • Exhausted land • Fluctuating prices • Discouraged industry and immigration • “false” prosperity • Plantation system • Economy and government run by small group • Social Stratification • Planter elite • Small farmers • Poor whites

  11. Southern Agriculture

  12. Changes in Cotton Production 1820 1860

  13. Value of Cotton Exports As % of All US Exports

  14. Slavery in the South • Unequal distribution • most slaves owned by planter elite • poor whites still defended b/c dreamed of being slave owners and racial superiority • Sustaining Slavery • importation outlawed in 1808 • were investment, so wanted to keep slaves alive and encourage procreation • majority of the population in the deep south; development of slave culture • Treatment of Slaves • sources of labor and sexual satisfaction • long hours and harsh conditions • beatings • separation of families

  15. Slave-Owning Population (1850)

  16. Fight for Equality • By slaves • work slowly • steal • sabotage equipment • poison owners • rebel or run away • By abolitionists • American Colonization Society (1817) • Liberia (1822) • American Anti-Slavery Society (1833) • William Lloyd Garrison • The Liberator • Sojourner Truth; Frederick Douglas • Racial inequality common in the north

  17. 90% of slaves lived on plantations or farms • Most slaves on cotton plantations worked sunup to sundown, 6 days/week • About 75% of slaves were field workers, about 5% worked in industry • Urban slaves had more autonomy than rural slaves Slaves’ Daily Life and Labor

  18. Normal family life difficult for slaves • fathers cannot always protect children • families vulnerable to breakup by masters • Most reared in strong, two-parent families • Extended families provide nurture, support amid horror of slavery • Slave culture a family culture that provided a sense of community Slave Families, Kinship, and Community

  19. Slave 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.].

  20. Slave Resistance • Refusal to work hard. • Isolated acts of sabotage. • Escape via the Underground Railroad.

  21. The 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].

  22. Slave Concentration, 1860

  23. Pro-Slavery Response • Tightened slave codes • Paternalistic argument • Religious argument • Comparisons to Northern factories • Economic necessity for the entire nation

  24. Using information gathered from at least three of the sources we examined today, answer the following: Was slavery more of a burden or a benefit to Antebellum America? **DON’T QUOTE the documents – use inferences drawn from the documents **response should be a minimum of a 5-sentence paragraph …To End: Synthesis Exercise

More Related