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Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South Chapter 11 The Cotton Economy •A shift of economic power from the “upper South” to the “lower South” took place. •This led to a growing dominance of cotton in the southern economy referred to as “King Cotton

Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South Chapter 11

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Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South Chapter 11. The Cotton Economy A shift of economic power from the “upper South” to the “lower South” took place . This led to a growing dominance of cotton in the southern economy referred to as “King Cotton ”. The Rise of King Cotton. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South

Chapter 11

The Cotton Economy•A shift of economic power from the “upper South” to

the “lower South” took place.•This led to a growing dominance of cotton in the

southern economy referred to as “King Cotton”

Page 2: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Rise of King Cotton• In the 19th century the upper South (VA, MD, NC)

cultivated tobacco, but prices became unstable and the soil exhausted.•By the 1830s the upper South began to grow wheat,

while tobacco growing shifted westward. •The Southern regions of South (SC, GA, FL)

continued growing rice, while the Gulf Coast cultivated some sugar but crops were limited

Page 3: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Cotton Kingdom

Page 4: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Cotton Gin

•The decline of tobacco in the upper South led not to industrialization but the growing of short-staple cotton, which could grow in different environments.•With the invention of the cotton gin short-staple

cotton was now profitable. •Demand for cotton growing was at its height due to

the rise of textile industry in Great Britian during the 1820s/30s and New England in the 1840s/50s•New lands and expansion of cotton growing were

needed to meet this new demand.

Page 5: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Cotton Gin

Page 6: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•At the beginning of the 1820s production of cotton moved westward into Alabama, Mississippi, LA, TX, AK. By the 1850s it dominated the economy.•The “Lower South” or “Cotton Kingdom” attracted

many seeking profits & also slaves.

Page 7: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Southern Trade & Industry

•Business classes and manufacturers were unimportant in the South due to slow growth & location which was mainly in the upper South. •The non-farm commercial sectors mainly served the

needs of the plantation economy. Brokers who marketed crops acted as merchants and lenders.•The South’s primitive banking system did not allow

for structures necessary for industrial development.

Page 8: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•The South also had an inadequate transportation system with few roads, canals, & national railroads.•Some southerners recognized

the economic subordination to north and advocated for economic independence including New Orleans native James De Bow who wrote of this in his magazine De Bow’s Review.

Page 9: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Sources of Southern Difference

•Despite “colonial dependency” the South did little to industrialize because the agricultural system & cotton were so profitable•There was little incentive to look beyond because

the wealthy had already invested much of their capital into land & slaves.

Page 10: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•The Lack of commercial growth also resulted because of traditional values distinctive to South.•The South discouraged cities & industry due to their

perceived elegance & more refined life than rapid growth.

Page 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

White Society in the South

•The Planter Class•The majority of people didn’t own slaves (only ¼

did) & of those a small % owned many.•The planter aristocracy (those owning 40+ slaves

and 800+ acres of land) exercised power and influence greater than their number. •They excercised political, economic, & social control

& saw themselves as aristocracy despite most wealth being recent

Page 12: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Planter & His Slaves

Page 13: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•Growing crops was profitable but just as competitive and risky as industry in North.•After struggling to reach

their position in society they were determined to defend it. This is perhaps why the defense of slavery and the South’s “rights” were stronger in the booming lower South and weaker in the more established southern areas.

Page 14: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

“Honor”•White males adopted

a code of chivalry that obligated them to defend their “honor”. •Ethical ideals such as

bravery & also the public appearance of dignity & authority led southerners to fight back.

Page 15: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The “Southern Lady”•The lives of affluent women were centered in the

home.•They had little role in public activities or as wage

earners. •White men more dominant & women subordinate

than in North•Most lived a solitary farm life with no access to the

“public world”. This led to the role wife & mother.

• Less educational opportunities were available for women

Page 16: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The “Southern Lady”

Page 17: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Plain Folk• This describes the typical person of

the South. Not the planter & slaveholder but the modest yeoman farmer that practiced mainly subsistence farming. They lacked the resources for cotton or to expand their operations

• They had little prospect of bettering their position in society because the southern educational system provided poor whites with little opportunity to learn.

Page 18: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•The majority were excluded from planter society, but opposition to the elite was limited mainly to the “hill” and “backcountry” or people who were secluded, unconnected to commercial economy, and loyal to the nation while above sectional fighting.•Most non-slaveowning whites lived in the middle of

the plantation system and were tied to it. They relied on planters for markets, credit, and were linked through kinship.•A large sense of democracy & political participation

gave a sense of connection to the societal order. The Cotton boom of the 1850s gave them hope of economic betterment.

Page 19: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•A belief existed that an assault on one hierarchical system (slavery) would threaten another hierarchical system (patriarchy or social organization).•Even the south’s poorest members (known as “clay

eaters”) who owned no profitable land did not offer great opposition to the established society. The greatest factor binding all classes together was perception of race and members of the ruling race.

Page 20: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Slavery – The “Peculiar Institution”•Varieties of Slavery•Slavery was called “peculiar”

by Southerners because it was distinctive from the North & Western world.•Slavery was regulated by law.

Slave codes forbade property, congregation, & teaching a slave. Anyone suspected of having a trace of African blood was defined as black

Page 21: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•Despite the provisions of law, a variety existed within the slave system because white owners handled most transgressions.•The size of the farm & number of slaves varied.•The majority of slave-owners were small farmers, but the

majority of slaves lived on medium to large plantations where there was a less intimate owner-slave relationship.

Page 22: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Life Under Slavery•Slaves generally received enough necessities to

enable them to live and work; they lived in slave quarters. •Slaves worked hard. Women labored in fields with

the men and had other chores. Women were often single because their husbands were sold away (single parents)

Page 23: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•Slaves had a high death rate and less children survived to adulthood than whites.•Some say the material

condition of slavery may have been better than some northern factory workers.•Their lives were less severe

than slaves in Caribbean & South America. • Laws preventing slave

imports were an incentive to the Southern elite to provide some care.

Page 24: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•Other cheap laborers (such as Irish) were used to perform the most dangerous and least healthy tasks to protect their investment. Still overseers hired by owners often treated slave badly, and household servants were often sexually abused by their master.

Page 25: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Slavery in the Cities•On isolated plantations masters maintained direct

control. Slaves in cities were often hired out to do labor and unskilled jobs.• In cities the line between slavery & freedom was

less clear. White southerners viewed slavery as incompatible with city life. Cities used segregation to maintain social organization.

Page 26: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Free African-Americans•About 250,000 free African Americans were located

in slaveholding states before the Civil War. •Most were located in VA and MD. Some had earned

money and bought freedom for themselves and their family. Mostly urban blacks were able to do this.•Some slaves were freed by their master for moral

reasons, while others after their master died.

Page 27: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•During the 1830s, state laws for slaves tightened because of the growing number of free blacks & abolition movement in North gaining steam that made manumission of slaves harder.•Most free blacks were very poor, had limited

opportunities & therefore were only quasi-free.

Page 28: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Slave Trade•The transfer of slaves from one part of the South to

another was an important consequence of development of Southwest. •Sometimes slaves moved with their master but

more often were transferred through slave traders.•The domestic slave trade was important to the

growth and prosperity of the system, but dehumanizing. It was here that children were often separated from parents.

Page 29: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Slave Trade

Page 30: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Slave Resistance

•Most slaves were unhappy being slaves & wanted freedom but they dealt with slavery through adaptation (slaves who acted as white world expected him, charade for whites) or resistance (those who could not come to accommodate their status)• In 1831 Nat Turner, a slave preacher, led armed

African Americans in VA but eventually was overpowered by state & federal troops.

Page 31: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Slave Resistance

Page 32: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•The Nat Turner Rebellion was the only actual slave insurrection in the 19th century, but fear of slave conspiracies renewed violence & led to stricter laws.•Some slaves attempted to resist by running away,

escaping to the North or Canada using the Underground Railroad.•People like Harriet Tubman & sympathetic whites

assisted them on this route. The odds of success were low.•Slaves also resisted by refusing to work hard & stealing

from their master.

Page 33: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

Underground Railroad

Page 34: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Culture of Music• Language and Music• Slaves incorporated African speech w/ English- called

“pidgin”• Songs were very important in order to pass time. Some had

political, emotional, & religious messages.•African-American Religion• By the 19th century nearly all slaves were Christians. Black

congregations were illegal, but most went to master’s church led by Baptist or Methodist white minister

Page 35: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•African American religion was more emotional.• It reflected the influence of African customs and

practices where chanting emphasized the dream of freedom and deliverance. •Christian images were central to slave leaders Gabriel

Prosser, Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner.

Page 36: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

The Slave Family•Blacks were deprived of legal marriage, but the

“nuclear family” was the dominant kinship model. •Up to 1/3 of black families were broken apart by the

slave trade, which led to strong extended kinship networks.•Black women often bore children to white masters.

Page 37: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old  South Chapter 11

•Slaves had a complex relationship with their masters because they depended on them for material means of existence as well as a sense of security and protection. •This paternalism was used as an instrument of white

control. This sense of mutual dependence reduced resistance to an institution that only benefited ruling white race.