1 / 25

Journal # 35

Journal # 35. Cotton belt – the area where cotton was grown; from South Carolina to east Texas Planters – large-scale farmers who held more than 20 slaves (a very small percentage of farmers in the South were planters)

obelia
Download Presentation

Journal # 35

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. Journal #35 • Cotton belt – the area where cotton was grown; from South Carolina to east Texas • Planters – large-scale farmers who held more than 20 slaves (a very small percentage of farmers in the South were planters) • Yeomen – owners of small farms (the majority of white farmers in the South) • Discrimination – an act based upon prejudice

  2. Quotes of the Day • “A person who won't read has no advantage over one who can't read.” • “Anger is an acid that can do more harm to the vessel in which it is stored than to anything on which it is poured.” • “It is better to keep your mouth closed and have people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.” • “Laws control the lesser man... Right conduct controls the greater one.” • Mark Twain

  3. Mark Twain (1835 – 1910) • AKA Samuel Langhorne Clemens • Originally a rich Mississippi River steamboat pilot • American Author, “the father of American literature” • Wrote The Gilded Age and the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn • Went bankrupt • Suffered from depression • Supporter of abolition, anti-racism, and women’s rights • Born and died on years in which Haley’s comet was visible

  4. The South and Slavery 12.3 and 12.4

  5. Bonus Questions • What were the approximate years of the American Industrial Revolution? • Who is the “Father of the Industrial Revolution in America? • What were some of the new manufacturing methods used during the Industrial Revolution in America? • Who invented the steamboat? How did this invention affect America?

  6. Southern Agriculture • Before the Revolutionary War, there were 3 important crops • Tobacco • Rice • Indigo • After the Revolution, prices for these 3 crops dropped – the demand for slaves drops too • In the late 1700s cotton transforms the southern economy and increases the demand for slave labor

  7. The Cotton Gin • Southern farmers had been growing small amounts of cotton since 1607 • Long-staple cotton was easiest to process, but did not grow well in the South • Short-staple cotton grew well, but was very difficult to process • In 1792, New England inventor Eli Whitney came up with the idea for a cotton separator while visiting a friend in GA • The cotton gin was finished by 1793, it revived the cotton industry and helped transform the southern economy

  8. The Cotton Boom • The cotton gin caused many farmers to switch to growing cotton • Some moved west into the cotton belt ------- • Benefits of growing cotton included: • It was easy to grow and transport • It did not spoil if stored correctly • Crossbreeding produced stronger types of cotton • Disadvantages of growing cotton • Large amounts of nutrients pulled from the soil

  9. The Cotton Boom • Scientific agriculture starts to gain popularity at this time • Genetic engineering of new types of cotton • Some scientists recommend crop rotation • The cotton boom makes the institution of slavery stronger and makes the South a major power in global trade – Britain • Port cities grow • Charleston, SC, Savannah, GA, New Orleans, LA • Rivers are heavily used, Mississippi River steamboats become popular Mark Twain AKA Samuel Clemens’ Mississippi Steamboat

  10. Southern Industry • Southern industry lagged behind because of agricultural profits • Joseph R. Anderson built Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond, VA into a large company by 1860 • It produced half of the South’s artillery during the Civil War • One of the only buildings that survived the burning of Richmond, VA • This was the South’s only factory that made iron products at the time

  11. Southern Society • The majority of white southerners did not own any slaves • Between 1800 and 1850 only 33% of white southern families were slave owners • Even a smaller number were planters

  12. Planters or Planter Elite • A small minority with a huge amount of power • They served as political leaders • The men focused on raising and selling crops while the women managed the household • Marriages were often arranged for business or political reasons • “Planter Elite”

  13. Yeoman Farmers and the Poor • Most white southerners were yeoman farmers • They worked long days alongside their slaves (if they had any) • Others lived on land that couldn’t be farmed • They hunted, fished, and gardened • Usually poor

  14. African Americans • Most African Americans in the South were slaves, but a small minority were free • About 250,000 free African Americans by 1860 • They worked as farmers or on plantations • In cities they worked a variety of jobs • They also faced constant discrimination – they were seen as a threat to slavery by many whites

  15. The Slave System

  16. Slaves and Work • Although treatment of slaves varied, most owners tried to get slaves to work as much as possible • On small farms slaves did many different jobs • On large plantations slaves usually did a specific job, mostly in the fields • Plantations usually had an overseer and a slave foreman (aka driver) that oversaw slaves

  17. Slaves and Work • Plantations used the gang labor system – all field hands work the same job all day • Men, women, and children over 10 did the same work • Nothing stopped the work (sickness, bad weather, etc.) • A few slaves worked as butlers, cooks, or nurses in the planter’s home – they had better food and clothing • On larger plantations sometimes slaves worked at skilled jobs like blacksmithing or carpentry – some bought their freedom

  18. Life Under Slavery • Slave owners treated slaves as property not as people – they were bought and sold to make money • Sometimes free African Americans were kidnapped and sold into slavery • Slaves received poor clothing and shelter – cabins with dirt floors and leaky roofs • A few were allowed to farm and raise chickens • Slaves were punished harshly for disobedience

  19. Harry McMillan • “The punishments were whipping, putting you in the stocks and making you wear irons and a chain at work. They had a collar to put around your neck with two horns, so you could not lie down…Sometimes they dug a hole like a well with a door on top. They called it a dungeon keeping you in two or three weeks or a month, sometimes you died in there.”

  20. Life Under Slavery • Slaves could not travel far from their homes • It was usually illegal to teach slaves to read and write • Slave owners primary goal was to control their slaves

  21. Slave Culture • Slaves had a strong sense of community and culture • The most important unit was their family – they feared being sold away and separated • They passed down family histories and African traditions with folktales • Religion also played an important part in slave culture • Most slaves were Protestant • White preachers said that God wanted slaves to obey slaveholders • Slaves believed that everyone was equal in God’s eyes • Slaves sang spirituals – songs blending Christian and African traditions

  22. Challenging Slavery • Slaves rebelled against the slave system daily • Working slower • Running away – succeeding was hard • Violent slave revolts – were very rare • Revolts were planned in 1800 and 1822 but stopped before they were carried out

  23. Nat Turner’s Rebellion • Nat Turner was a slave from Virginia who felt that God had called on him to end slavery • He recruits slaves and his rebellion begins in August 1831 • Turner and his followers kill almost 60 white people • The rebellion is eventually put down and over 100 slaves are killed • Turner is caught and executed in November 1831 • Significance: this was the most violent slave revolt in U.S. history and caused planters to become very suspicious of their slaves

More Related