1 / 15

Slavery and Abolition

Slavery and Abolition. 1820-1850.

caron
Download Presentation

Slavery and Abolition

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. Slavery and Abolition 1820-1850

  2. Prior to the 1820s the view of slavery was in conflict with the ideas of the American Revolution, particularly the statement by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence that “all men are created equal.” For this reason, the attitude held by most slave owners was that slavery was immoral, but since the economy in the south was based on cash crop agriculture that used slave labor, it also was an economic necessity! • By the 1820s, cotton production made the South so rich that to justify owning slaves to themselves, Southerners began to change their opinions about slavery. Now they argued that slavery was a “positive good”and that slavery actually helped slaves. They wanted to make themselves feel better about slave owning. Slavery in the South

  3. Because the economy in the South was based on agriculture, his meant that the south had little industry of its own. Because the south had little industry, residents had to buy most of their manufactured goods from the north or Europe. They paid more money than people in the north for manufactured items. This meant that the south got little benefit from the high protective tariff, and were against the tariff.

  4. Cotton was the main cash crop. While the south is known for its Plantation system, most people lived as subsistence farmers. Only 25% of whites owned slaves because slaves cost a lot of money. Of those whites who owned slaves, most only owned one or two.

  5. Reform movement by people who wanted to end slavery in the United States. Abolition

  6. By the 1850s, 40% of the population of the South were slaves. These slaves were valuable because the growing southern economy provided the world with 2/3 of its cotton supply. Because cotton and the slave labor system that supported it were so valuable, any suggestion that the south end slavery brought about tremendous opposition. Rise of the Abolition Movement

  7. 1. Conservative: Emancipation of slaves and their return to Africa with financial Compensation by the US government to slave owners. • “America Colonization Society:” organization who wanted to end slavery by buying slaves from their masters & sending them to live Liberia (Africa) because they believed Africans were inferior to whites and should not live in the US. 2. Radical: Emancipation through slave revolt. 3. Moderate: Emancipation by appealing to the Christianity of slave owners. Strategies of Abolitionists

  8. The moderateabolition movement was started in the north in the 1830s by William Lloyd Garrison who published “The Liberator”an anti-slavery newspaper. He was helped by many abolitionist leaders from New England who saw slavery as a VIOLATION of Christian principles. They wanted slaves to be emancipated (freed). He demanded the” immediate and uncompensated emancipation of slavery.”

  9. Another important abolitionist was writer Harriet Beecher Stowe, the wife of a New England preacher. In 1852 she wrote the best selling book Uncle Tom’s Cabin that created widespread sympathy for slaves and horror towards the slave system. By 1860 it was the 2nd best selling book in the world, passed only by the Bible!

  10. REBELLIONS: the most famous call for rebellion was issued by a man named David Walker. He was a free black who lived in New York and worked for an abolitionist newspaper. In 1830 he wrote pamphlets calling for slave rebellions. Unfortunately he died before the most famous rebellions occurred

  11. The most famous slave rebellion was Nat Turner’s Rebellion in 1831. Nat Turner was a house slave who hoped to be set free by his master. Instead he was sold, and was separated from his family and was sent to work in the Virginia fields. Turner became a preacher and convinced himself he was sent to Earth by God to lead a race war. He interpreted a comet as an omen to attack, and led 50 other blacks in a rampage killing 200 white slave owners and their families. After a few days the rebels were hunted down by a posse and were hanged. Turner hid in the swamp for 2 months before he was captured and hanged. The Nat Turner Rebellion

  12. Turner’s rebellion was IMPORTANT because: 1. it scared slave owners 2. slaves were banned from learning to read 3. harsher slave codes were passed 4. freed slaves had to leave Virginia within 6 months Results of Turner’s Rebellion

  13. Another way slaves opposed slavery was by running away. Most who ran away did so to reunite with family members in the North. The most famous route north was called the Underground Railroad-- the nickname for the informal network of abolitionists willing to help slaves escape. The hid these slaves in their houses and provided food. The most famous of these “conductor”on the Underground Railroad was Harriet Tubman who made 50 successful trips. The Underground Railroad

  14. Several former slaves such as: Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass tried to appeal to the consciences of individual slave owners by arguing that: • 1. slavery was morally wrong • 2. black people were equal to whites • Southerners who defended slavery were called Apologists. They argued that slavery was good because: • 1. slavery forced Africans to become Christians • 2. black people were inferior to whites both biologically and intellectually • To maintain the country as one piece, in 1836 Congress adopted the “Gag Rule.”The idea was that the abolitionist issue would not bring other business in Congress to a complete stop. This rule stayed in effect until 1848. HOWEVER as the United States expanded west, conflict over slavery grew more heated and threatened to tear the country apart.

More Related