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The South and the Slavery Controversy
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The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Dec 17, 2015

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Griffin Cooper
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Page 1: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The South and the Slavery Controversy

Page 2: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The Slavery Issue

• Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves

• Eli Whitney restores profitability of slavery

• Cotton cultivation chains the slave to the gin, and the planter to the slave.

Page 3: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Cotton is King • Cotton- planters now moving to Gulf States because

soil is fertile• Northern merchants get rich- transport cotton to

England, then buy English goods to bring back to America

• Cotton- ½ of nations exports in 1840• Supplies half of world’s cotton supply• 75% of England’s cotton comes from the south-

England is largest producer of cotton cloth

Page 4: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Cotton Is King

• England’s dependence on South’s cotton makes them feel like Kings

Page 5: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The Planter Aristocracy

• South is more of an oligarchy than democracy

• Only 1,733 families owned over 100 slaves

• This select few dominate politics, economy, and and social aspects of life

• “Cottonocracy”

Page 6: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The Planter Aristocracy• Planters have majority of

wealth in South• Educate their kids in North

or abroad• Money allows leisure, for

study, reflection, and statecraft

• Aristocracy= undemocratic• Gap between rich and poor

increases• No public education, rich

can send kids to North, why use tax money

Page 7: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The Planter Aristocracy

• Women• Plantation mistress-

large staff to run• Some good, some bad• Almost all are against

abolition, don’t have problems with separating slave families

Page 8: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slaves of the Slave System

• Quick profits leads to excessive planting = land butchery

• Monopolistic- small farmers often forced to sell lands to large farmers, then move north and west

Page 9: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slaves of the Slave System

• Plantation system can be financially unstable– Get rich quick, many

planters buy too much land and go into debt

– Slaves are heavy investments

– Slaves can runway, or be wiped out be a disease easily

• One crop economy- price levels are controlled by global factors

Page 10: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slaves of the Slave System• South resents North getting

rich at their expense• North “owns them from

cradle to grave” • No immigration in the

South why?– Slaves are labor source

– Best lands are too expensive

– Most immigrants lack knowledge of cotton planting

Page 11: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The White Majority

• Roughly only ¼ of South owns slaves or belonged to slave holding family

• Most slave owners own less than 5 slaves- worked on small farms , worked next to their slaves

Page 12: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The White Majority

• 75% of south population owns no slaves

• Most dream of becoming large plantation owner

• Forced into crappy lands, mountainous areas- subsistence farmers

• Known as hillbillies, crackers, clay eaters

Page 13: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

White Majority

• If minority hold slaves, why did they fight in the ACW?

• 1.American Dream- maybe a few more slaves and I’ll be rich

• 2. Racial- Despite being poor and often living in worse conditions, still felt superior to blacks, if blacks are freed this kills that mindset

Page 14: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

White Majority

• Special group of men- mountain whites- outskirts of society, many never seen a slave

• In the ACW, mountain whites will play crucial rule in helping the Union

Page 15: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Free Blacks of the South

• 250,000• In upper south- most

earned freedom after the AR

• Deep South- mulattoes, offspring of master and slave mistress– In New Orleans- many were

successful property owners

Page 16: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Free Blacks of the South

• The “Third Race”• Banned from certain jobs,

can’t testify against whites in courts

• Slave traders could kidnap them back into slavery

• White majority hates them, gives other slaves hope

Page 17: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Free Blacks of the North • Face same (if not more)

racism • Can’t vote, barred from

public schools • Irish hate them because

they compete for same unskilled jobs

• In the south- whites hate the race, but like the individual, in the north whites profess to like the race, but hate the individual

Page 18: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Plantation Slavery

• 4 million in the south in chattel slavery

• Slave traded ended in US 1808

• England 1807• Yet estimations of 3

millions slaves still illegally shipped around the world – “black ivory”

Page 19: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Plantation Slavery

• Stopping international slave trade encourages the internal (domestic) slave trade – Slaves goes from Upper south to deep south

• “Sold down the river”• Slave population growth is

due to natural production- makes US unique in slave history

Page 20: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Plantation Slavery

• Slaves are huge investment, and a sign of wealth in the south

• If jobs are too dangerous, plantations use Irish, rather than risk a slave’s life

• Female slaves now have a high value – “rattlin good breeders” usually had 13-14 kids (including mulattoes)

Page 21: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Plantation Slavery

Page 22: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Life of Slaves

• Differs greatly• Most work dusk till dawn• Most have white overseer

or black driver• No legal protection• Some states have laws that

down allow selling of children

• But- hard to enforce, black marriages are legal, and than cannot testify in court

Page 23: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Life of Slaves

• Whipping is best punishment

• Sometimes breakers must be sent

• Breakers = extremely cruel overseers

• Savage beatings are not common WHY

Page 24: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The Black Belt

• By 1860 most slaves concentrated in the Deep South- SC, GE, AL, MS, LA

• Also known as cotton kingdom

Page 25: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Life of Slaves

• Majority life on large plantations- communities of 20 or more slaves

• Most slave separations occur on smaller farms

• Despite conditions, form a distinct culture

Page 26: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slaves and Religion

• Religion, mix of African and Christianity

• “Tell old Pharaoh, let my people go”

• Responsorial – congregation responds with assents or amens-

Page 27: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slave Resistance

• 9 out of 10 blacks are totally illiterate b4 ACW

• Most successful methods of resistance– Work as slow as possible

(hence myth that blacks are lazy)

– Steal food from plantation house

– Break Equipment– Abortions, birth control

Page 28: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slave Resistance

• Were slave rebellions, but never successful. Often informed upon by other slaves.

• 1800 Gabriel in Richmond • Denmark Vesey,

Charleston in 1822.• Most famous was rebellion

by Nat Turner in Va. in 1831.

Page 29: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slave Resistance

• Spanish Slave Ship Amistad 1839

• Spent two years in prison• JQA releases them and

sends them to Sierra Leone (British Colony)

• White southerners, out numbered, are now terrified in the face of rebellions, especially Nat Turner’s

Page 30: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Early Abolitionism

• Early abolitionism. Quakers.

• American Colonization Society (1817)

• Liberia. 15000 freed blacks transported to Africa

• Why don’t more American Blacks go back to Africa?.

Page 31: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Early Abolition • In the 1830s abolitionist turned into a crusade.

– Why?

• Theodore Dwight Weld—early Abolitionist preacher.– American Slavery as It Is (1839)

• Lyman Beecher, head of Lane Theological Seminary, hotbed of early abolitionism. Very influential and father of “Lanes Rebels”– Harriet Beecher Stowe –Uncle Tom’s Cabin

– Henry Ward Beecher- Beecher’s Bibles

– Catharine Beecher- Women’s education movement

Page 32: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Radical Abolition • 1831 William Lloyd

Garrison• Published militant

abolitionist magazine: The Liberator.

• Founded the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833.

• Immediate Abolition • Critics say- too radical, and

didn’t offer any solution to “race” problem

I will be as harsh as the truth and as uncompromising as justice… I am earnest- I will not equivocate- I will not excuse- I will not retreat a single inch- I will be heard

Page 33: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Black Abolitionists • Sojourner Truth –abolition

and women’s rights• David Walker—Militant-

Appeal to Colored Citizens of the World

• Frederick Douglas– Narrative of Life of Frederick

Douglass (3 times)

– Greatest of the Black abolitionists

– escaped from bondage in 1838 at 21.

– Protégé of Garrison

Page 34: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

The South Lashes Back

• Before 1830:– More anti-slavery societies in south than north

– Southerners openly debated merits of slavery.

• After 1830 debate in South ends and many southerners defend as positive good. What changed?– Nat Turners rebellion in 1831

– Nullification Crisis

– Reaction to Northern criticism

– Southern preachers arguing that slavery supported by Bible

Page 35: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slavery the positive good?

• Slavery is supported by the bible and wisdom of Aristotle

• Africans taken from barbarianism, and brought to Christian civilization

• South tries to paint slave master is caring father of slave family

Page 36: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Slavery the positive good?

• South said slaves were happier than wage slaves of the north (Irish)

• How so? • South now viewed as

backward, while North viewed as moving forward

• 1836- Gag Resolution- slavery cannot be debated in congress

Page 37: The South and the Slavery Controversy The Slavery Issue Post Revolution- TJ and other southern leaders openly talk about freeing slaves Eli Whitney restores.

Abolitionists Impact in the North • Abolitionists were not particularly

popular in the North for some time. Why?– North had heavy stake in the cotton of the

south.

– Textile mills relied on southern cotton.

– Many northerners feared political controversy.

• Many northern politicians carefully distanced themselves from the abolitionists.

• Abolitionists harassed

• Yet, by 1850 abolitionism had gained strength and taken root as a popular cause.