WARM UP 11.24.14 If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would...

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Warm Up 11.24.14 If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would they be?

Transcript of WARM UP 11.24.14 If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would...

Page 1: WARM UP 11.24.14 If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would they be?

Warm Up11.24.14

• If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would they be?

Page 2: WARM UP 11.24.14 If you had to pick THREE adjectives to describe the “OLD SOUTH”, what would they be?

The Old South

Cotton Is King

• By 1820, slavery was an old institution in America

• Sheryl Crow quote*

The Second Middle Passage

• “peculiar institution” • slave population had increased to nearly 4 million and slavery had spread

to Arkansas, Louisiana, and eastern Texas. Slaves were one-third of the South’s entire population and half of the population in the cotton states of the Deep South.

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyMap 11.1 Slave Population, 1860

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyTable 11.1 Growth of The Slave Population

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The Old SouthSlavery and the Nation

• Although the northern states abolished slavery, slavery affected them, nonetheless• Constitution

• disproportionate power to southern states• Slavery touched the lives of all Americans

• Northern merchants and manufacturers participated in the slave economy and profited from it. • Cotton trade profits helped finance industrial development and internal improvements in the

North.• Northern ships carried cotton, northern banks financed plantations, northern companies

insured slave property, and northern factories turned cotton into clothing.

The Southern Economy• Upper South = much smaller % of slaves & slave

owners• Deep South was ALL plantations

• TX to SC• Inhibited industrial growth

• No large & diverse cities, except for New Orleans

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The Old South

Plain Folk of the Old South• Most southern white families did not own slaves (3/4)

• Many were self-sufficient and remote from markets

• They were often desperately poor and more often illiterate

The Planter Class

• Most slave owners did not own large plantations

• small number of families owned more than 20 slaves; • even fewer owned more than 100 slaves.• Planters owned slaves to make huge profits, and they used

those profits for the conspicuous consumption of luxury goods, creating an aristocratic material life sharply at odds with life for most northerners.

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyMap 11.2 Size of Slaveholdings, 1860

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The Old SouthThe Paternalist Ethos

• Idea that slaveholding gentlemen took personal responsibility for the well-being of their dependent women, children, and slaves.

• This outlook of “paternalism” had long been a feature of American slavery

The Code of Honor

In the South, men of all classes followed a code of personal honor,

• in which they were expected to• defend the reputation of themselves and their families, • with violence if necessary. • Dueling, while illegal, was not uncommon. • Southern white women were even more confined to the home

and the domestic ideal than northern

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The Old SouthThe Proslavery Argumentpro-slavery thought came to dominate southern intellectual and cultural life.

• Racism—the belief that blacks were innately inferior to whites and suited for slavery—framed the proslavery argument.

• Slave owners also found justification for slavery in ancient history and the Bible. • Some southerners argued that black slavery guaranteed equality for whites by

preventing the growth of a white working class in the South. • Slavery, they argued, provided the economic autonomy and independence that

the North’s industrial workers lacked and which formed the basis of the republic.

Abolition in the Americas • Southern slaveholders knew of the Haitian Revolution, other slave rebellions, and

British abolition. • Emancipation throughout the Americas strongly shaped debates about slavery and its

future in the United States. • While American slave owners argued that emancipation had been a failure,

abolitionists disagreed.• By 1850, slave systems remained in the western hemisphere only in Cuba, Puerto

Rico, Brazil, and the United States

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The Old South

Slavery and Liberty

• South Carolina in particular was home to many who argued that freedom and equality were not universal entitlements, even for all whites

• When sectionalism intensified after 1830, more southern writers and politicians came to defend slavery Slavery and Civilization

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Life under SlaverySlaves and the Law

• Legal property of their owners• Few rights rarely enforced

• Bought and sold• Could not

• testify in court• Sign contracts• Own firearms• Hold meetings• Leave farm without permission

• By 1830s, Illegal to teach how to read or write

Conditions of Slave Life • some southern states passed laws to prevent slave mistreatment• Better diets than slaves in West Indies and Brazil• Paternalism• value of slaves encourages better treatment

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Life under SlaveryFree Blacks in the Old South

• Slavery helped define the status of free blacks. • By the Civil War, half a million free blacks lived in the United States, the majority in the

South. • In most of the North, free blacks could not vote and had few economic opportunities. • In the South, free blacks could own their own property, could marry, and could not be

bought or sold as slaves. • But they had virtually no other rights in southern society.

• They could not own dogs, guns, or liquor; could not strike whites, even in self-defense; and had to carry proof of their free status.

• In other American slave societies, where racial identity was less sharply distinguished, free blacks amassed property and prestige.

• In the United States, the sharp racial distinction between black and white left little room for a mulatto class to emerge.

The Upper and Lower South • By 1860, very few of the South’s free blacks lived in the Lower South, and those who did were

mostly in cities. • In New Orleans and Charleston,

• In the Upper South, where most southern free blacks lived, they worked mostly for wages as farm labor. Some free blacks here even owned slaves.

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyTable 11.3 Free Black Population, 1860

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyMap 11.3 Distribution of Free Blacks, 1860

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Life under SlaverySlave Labor

• Slavery was above all a labor system, in which work occupied the entirety of slaves’ time, except for brief meals.

• On large plantations, slaves performed all kinds of work, • from labor in the fields • to skilled labor like carpentry, • engineering, • and shoemaking. • Slaves also worked on steamboats, in mines, in seaports, and on railroads. Local authorities used them

to build roads and other facilities, and the federal government used them to build forts and other public buildings.

• Professionals such as merchants, lawyers, and businessmen used slaves, • and by the Civil War, 200,000 slaves worked in industries such as

• ironworks and tobacco factories. • In southern cities, slaves were used as unskilled labor and skilled artisans. A few slaves

were entrusted with great responsibilities, such as supervising other slaves, selling goods, or handling money.

Gang Labor and Task Labor• Most slaves, perhaps as many as 75 percent of women and 90 percent of men, worked

in the fields. • On small farms, slaves worked alongside their owner. • The largest concentration of slaves worked on plantations in the Cotton Belt in gangs,

directed by an overseer and maybe a slave “driver.” • Overseers, tasked with producing large crops, were often brutal.

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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyMap 11.4 Major Crops of the South, 1860

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Life under SlaverySlavery in the Cities

• From the slaves’ perspective, slavery in different regions of the South could be “worse” in some respects and “better” in others.

• Slaves in rice fields faced harsh conditions but had more independence than other slaves because of task labor and the absence of a large white population.

• Skilled urban slave craftsmen had great autonomy and often could hire themselves out and sometimes even keep their earnings.

• Many urban slaves even lived by themselves!

Maintaining Order• Slavery was based on force. • Slave owners used a variety of methods to maintain order and discipline

• Masters could inflict almost any kind of punishment, and it was the rare slave who was not whipped at some point in his or her life.

• Even minor infractions invited whipping.• Owners used subtler methods, too.

• They exploited divisions among the slaves, especially between field hands and house servants.• They created incentives for hard work,

• such as time off • even cash payments.

• The threat of sale was the most powerful weapon owners had, since sale disrupted families and slave communities.