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Transcript of Slavery, Abolition, and the Quest for Freedom: The Coming of the Civil War, 1793-1861 Chapter 6 Life...
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Slavery, Abolition, and the Quest for Freedom: The Coming of the Civil War, 1793-1861
Chapter 6
Life in the Cotton Kingdom
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1835 AdvertisementA slave buyer offers cash for men, women, and children in this 1835 advertisement.
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I. The Expansion of Slavery
Invention of cotton gin, 1793 Made cotton profitable
Rapid territorial expansion of slavery Atlantic coast to Texas Forced removal of American Indians Slave population increased six-fold, 1790-
1860 Grew fastest in Alabama and Mississippi
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Map 6–1. Cotton Production in the South, 1820–1860Cotton production expanded westward between 1820 and 1860 into Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and western Tennessee.
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Ownership: Slaves in the Old South Slavery unevenly distributed 25% of white families owned slaves in 1860,
down from 36% in 1830 Nearly half of slaveholders owned fewer than
five slaves 12% owned more than twenty slaves 1% owned more than fifty slaves Typical slave lived on a sizeable
plantation
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U.S. Slave Population, 1820 and 1860
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Map 6–2. Slave Population, 1820–1860Slavery spread southwestward from the upper South and the eastern seaboard following the spread of cotton cultivation.
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Black Slaveholders
In 1830, only 2% of free blacks owned slaves.
Protected their families from sale and distribution
Southern states made manumissions harder
Threatened to banish former slaves
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The Battle of Put-in Bay
In this engraving, which dates to about 1860, slaves harvest cotton under white supervision on a southern plantation. Note the division of labor with women picking and men packing and carrying.
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II. Slave Labor in Agriculture
Slaves in the South 55% cultivated Cotton 10% grew tobacco 10% produced sugar, rice, hemp 15% domestic servants 10% trades and industries
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Agriculture, Industry, and Slavery in the Old South, 1850
Map 6–3. Agriculture, Industry, and Slavery in the Old South, 1850.
The experience of African Americans in slavery varied according to their occupation and the region of the South in which they lived.
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Slave Labor in Agriculture (cont.) Tobacco Labor intensive crop Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, North Carolina Rice South Carolina and Georgia coastal
waterways Large plantations needed large labor force Some with 300, 500, one planter with 1,000
slaves
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Slave Labor in Agriculture (cont.) Sugar
Along the Mississippi River – Southern Louisiana
-Warm climate Long growing season Sixty inches of rain per year Constant labor Harsh conditions ~ hot and humid African Americans feared being sent to work here
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Cotton Exports as a Percentage of All U.S. Exports, 1800–1860
Figure 6–1. Cotton Exports as a Percentage of All U.S. Exports, 1800–1860
Cotton rapidly emerged as the country’s most important export crop after 1800 and key to its prosperity. Because slave labor produced the cotton, increasing exports strengthened the slave system itself.
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Slave Labor in Agriculture (cont.) Cotton Most important crop in the South and the
nation Exports more than 50% Increased exports strengthened slavery itself
Cotton plantations employed bulk of slaves Britain and New England textile mills Mississippi and Alabama ~ leading producers Price for slaves increased
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Cool Down
Explain why you think most slave owners owned very few slaves?
List the four main crops that required slave labor.
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Hauling the Whole Week’s Picking
Hauling the Whole Week’s Picking, painted in 1842 by William Henry Brown, shows slaves at work on a Mississippi cotton plantation. Brown emphasizes the heavy physical exertion required of men, women, and children.
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III. House Servants andSkilled Slaves
25% of slaves did non-agricultural duties House servants ~ elite slaves
Cooks and maids Less physically demanding Better food and clothing Grueling, hard work in 19th century kitchens Closer white supervision than field hands
Skilled craftsmen ~ elite slaves Carpenters, blacksmiths, and millwrights Traveling for tool and spare parts gave a taste of freedom “Hiring out” – sold service to another
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Urban Slavery
Urban slaves Domestics, washwomen, waiters, artisans– Interacted with free black community
Urban slaves had opportunities to earn money when not working for masters
Hired out and paid masters a portion of earnings
More self-sufficiency ~ masters had less control
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Industrial Slavery About 5% of 1860 slave population
Textile mills in South Carolina and Georgia– Iron Works in Virginia and other locales– Lumber industry, naval stores
Most industrialist in the South hired slaves– Slaves preferred industrial to plantation
• Greater self-rule• Path to freedom for some
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Population Percentages in the Southern States, 1850.
Map 6–4. Population Percentages in the Southern States, 1850.
The percentages of slaves, free African Americans, and white people varied from state to state. In the upper South white populations were substantially larger than black populations. In the deep South, however, the races were more in balance.
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Punishment
Physical punishments For good performanceFear of the lash
–Induced discipline and work
–Encouraged cooperation for mutual protection
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Louisiana Slave Displays ScarsIn this 1863 photograph a former Louisiana slave displays the scars that resulted from repeated whippings. Although this degree of scarring is exceptional, few slaves were able to avoid being whipped at least once in their lives.
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Slave Punishment
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Check Point
Breaking of Kunte Kinte
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The Domestic Slave Trade The Selling of slaves from plantation to plantation South and westward cotton expansion Upper
South sells excess slaves to Lower South Upper South sent 50% slaves to Lower South, 1820-1860
“Sold down river” Economic necessity Profit Form of punishment Separated families
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A Black Father Being Sold Away from His Family
This woodcut of a black father being sold away from his family appeared in The Child’s Anti-Slavery Book in 1860. Family ruptures, like the one shown, were among the more common and tragic aspects of slavery, especially in the upper South, where masters claimed slavery was “mild.”
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A Slave CoffleBefore 1850 Washington, D.C. was a major depot in the domestic (or interstate) slave trade. This woodcut portrays a slave coffle—a group of slaves bound together—passing the Capitol Building
in about 1815.
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VII. Slave Families
No legal standing Unions were encouraged
– Reduced rebelliousness in young, single men Slave weddings
– Most could chose their mates– Jumping the broom
Southern white concept of patriarchy (male dominance) saw white men have complete power over their wives.
Because black men lacked power, their wives were more like partners than servants
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Slave Families (cont.)
Children - Survival skills deception and cleverness Instructed in family history, religion, conduct Folk stories Extended family relationships
High infant mortality Diseases Unsupervised play with white children
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Exploitation
Sexual exploitation Long-term relations between slave women and masters common in 19th century
More common was forced sex
Justifications: Black women were promiscuous and deduced
white males Reduced Prostitution Promoted purity among white women
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Virginian Luxuries
Throughout its existence, slavery in America encouraged white men to exploit black women for sexual purposes and to abuse black men and women physically. Virginian Luxuries, painted c. 1810, aimed to expose and ridicule these practices.
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Sexual Exploitation Story
In Antebellum south (pre-civil war) case of Robert Newsom and Celia
Robert Newsom 60 year old slave master, Celia 14 year old slave
Repeated abuse She murdered him in 1855 Celia’s attorney argued that Missouri law made it a
crime to “take any woman unlawfully against her will” and Celia had the right to defend herself.
White male jury Convicted her of murder and executed
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Cool Down
Why was physical punishment so widely used by slaveholders?
Could slavery have existed if it wasn’t for physical abuse? Explain.
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VIII. The Socialization of Slaves
Subtle survival skills Mental agility Self-confidence Learned to watch what they said around
whites Learned not to talk back Learned to camouflage their feelings
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Religion
Coping mechanism Mid-19th century most slaves Protestant
– Biracial Baptist and Methodist churches• Racially segregated• Shared cemeteries
Slaves believed white churches taught “Servants obey your masters”
Preferred semi-secret black church• Moses and deliverance• Emotional - Musical
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Plantation Burial
British artist John Antrobus completed this painting in about 1860. It is named Plantation Burial and suggests the importance of religion among enslaved African Americans.
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The Character of Slavery Legacy
Historians have debated the character of the old south’s slave system
1910’s – U.B. Phillips, slavery a benign institution Christian slave owners cared largely for content
slaves; rescued an inferior race from barbarism 1950’s – Exploitation for white profits Most masters never met their slaves face to face Stories of whippings, domestic slave trade, family
separation.