Chapter 5 ms studies 2014
Chapter 14 north and south
The early american economy
Chapter 7- Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism 1812-1838.
Currier & Ives, Cotton Plantation. Growing Black Population 600% increase in black population, 179 0-1860 Less than 700,000 in 1790; 4 million by.
Chapter 12. Essential Questions How did northerners’ image of the Old South differ from the way in which southerners saw themselves? What major social.
North and South U.S. History Chapter 14. New Inventions A steam-powered locomotive engine pulling rail cars transformed railroads into practical transportation.
Section 3, cont. Punishment Physical (Corporal) Punishment Supported in the Bible Essential to keep the paternalistic character of slavery –Kept individual.
Eli Whitney's 1793 cotton gin invention revolutionized the Southern economy. Added to mechanical jennies to spin yarn, power looms to weave, and sewing.
Frederick Law Olmsted, 1822-1903 Tomorrow, after lunch, we will be visiting the Back Bay Fens, a portion of the “Emerald Necklace” of parks created for.
Sec. 3: Cotton Becomes King. 4 Key Questions (see handout) 1. How did the cotton gin affect the growth of slavery? 2. Why did cotton planters move westward?
Unit 2: African-Americans in the New Nation (1763-1861) African-Americans, both free and slave, struggle to find their way in the newly established United.