1 / 24

Regional Economies Develop

Regional Economies Develop. Essential Questions: In what ways can geography lead to political, economic , and cultural conflict? C an a nation respect regional differences and create a national identity at the same time?. Think, Pair, Share.

eros
Download Presentation

Regional Economies Develop

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. Regional Economies Develop Essential Questions: In what ways can geography lead to political, economic, and cultural conflict? Can a nation respect regional differences and create a national identity at the same time?

  2. Think, Pair, Share How does where you live affect your everyday life? (Describe at least 3 ways your life is affected)

  3. What are the themes of Geography? • Location • Region • Place • Movement • Human-Environment Interaction Open your text book to page xxx.

  4. Themes in Geography • Location • Region • Place • Movement • Human-Environment Interaction Which themes are highlighted? Turn to Pages 60 - 61

  5. Geography Spotlight (pg. 60-61) How did differences temperature and precipitation affect the growing season in each region? • Differences in: • Temperature • Precipitation • Soil How might the length of the growing season and the quality of the soil affect the economy?

  6. Geography Spotlight (pg. 67) • Temperature • Precipitation • Growing Season • Soil

  7. Differences Among the Colonies Some slavery Answer questions 1 – 4, 7 and 9

  8. Visual Summary, pg. 92

  9. Key Terms • cash crop • plantation • indentured servant • Slave • entrench http://www.learnersdictionary.com/definition/entrench

  10. Slavery in the South: 1650 – 1750 • What were the main reasons that English colonists turned to African slaves to fill their depleted labor force? • Economic • Socio-cultural From “Economic Development in the North and the South: 1650 – 1750”

  11. Key Questions • Why African slaves as opposed to Native American slaves? • How did the decline in indentured servants affect the price of indentured servants? • What made slaves a good investment? • What “ideas” did many white colonists have about Africans? • How did those “ideas” help whites justify the use of Africans as slave labor?

  12. Reasons Demand for African Slaves began to Rise • Southern farmers needed more workers to keep up with rising demand for their produce • They tried to enslave Native Americans but that did not work because • they refused to learn English farming methods • they knew the land too well – could easily escape • There were less indentured servants, which made them more expensive (law of supply and demand)

  13. Reasons Demand for African Slaves began to Rise • African slaves were expensive too, but they worked for their entire lives – which made them a better investment than indentured servants. • Whites convinced themselves that dark skin was a sign of inferiority • Whites assumed Africans were used to performing hard labor in hot climates

  14. Triangular Trade Answer questions 1 – 5 and 7

  15. Slavery and Tobacco Describing Trends • How would you describe the trends in American tobacco imported by England between 1619 and 1762? • How would you describe the trends in slave imports to Virginia from 1619 to 1762?

  16. Recognizing Relationships • Between which two years did tobacco imports increase the most? • Between which two years did the number of enslaved persons imported to Virginia increase the most? Based on the information in the two graphs, how would you describe the relationship between the slave trade and the production of tobacco?

  17. Turn to page 75 Making Connections How could the production of tobacco have increased so dramatically in the late 1600s, before there were many slaves to work in the fields? In other words, who was working the fields?

  18. The Northern Economy, 1650 - 1750

  19. Growth of the Factory System

  20. Let’s review the economic trends we’ve seen so far . . . . What’s happening in the North at this time? 1750 1861 1650 Civil War Begins What’s happening in the South at this time?

  21. The Cotton Gin page 215

  22. The Cotton Gin Create a Cause and Effect Chain Eli Whitney invents the Cotton Gin (1793) Cleaning cotton is now faster and easier At the same time, what is happening to the demand for cotton in the North? Why? Page 215 – 216

  23. Let’s review the trends we’ve seen so far . . . . What’s happening in the North at this time? What’s happening to the Northern economy at this time? 1750 1861 1650 Cotton Gin (1793) Civil War Begins What’s happening in the South at this time? What happens in the South as a result of this?

  24. In what ways did the Northern economy help perpetuate the dependence on slave labor in the South?

More Related