Download - Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

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Page 1: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

Page 2: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

WHAT WAS SLAVERY LIKE?

Page 3: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

WHAT WAS SLAVERY LIKE?

Page 4: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

WHAT WAS SLAVERY LIKE?

Page 5: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

WHAT WAS SLAVERY LIKE?

Page 6: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

Slavery as shown by HollywoodFact or Fiction?

Scene from Gone with the Wind, made in ______

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Real life for the Southern FamilyWhat was slavery really like for

them?

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Slave-ownership in the Pre-Civil South

15-20%

10%5%

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SUPPORT OF SLAVE OWNERSHIP

1. Slaves were expensive= $1000.00; only the wealthy planter could afford many slaves

2. Even though most people did not own slaves, they supported with the hope of owning slaves themselves;

3. Slaves were considered property and southerners believed they had the “right to own property” (COMES FROM THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE)

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Overview of Groups in the SouthGROUP DESCRIPTION 1. Slaves

--60% of Southern population --most lived on plantations --some were house slaves; some were field slaves

2. Free Blacks --1860, numbered million --discriminated against --could not vote and denied all civil rights --few could read or write --obtained freedom in one of the following ways: A. escaped to freedom B. purchased freedom by using money gained from after hours work (using learned skills: sewing, carpentry, blacksmith) C. willed freedom (from dead slaveowners)

3. Poor Whites --10-12 % of population --lived in mountains often where farming was poor

4. Laborers and Tenant farmers --usually in debt --lived hard lives

5. Small Farmers --middle class; small income

6. Slave owners --small slave owners: 1-2 slaves or a family of slaves --Planters: owned 20 or more slaves per family

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Treatment of slaves

• Depended on whether the slaveowner was “kind” or not

• “Difficult” slaves → slave breakers who used harsh treatment to break the slaves down

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Plantation slavery

Slave muzzle

Slave master brands

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Slaves were an investment!

• A hurt slave was not able to work!• Therefore, not all slaves were punished harshly• Masters generally “cared” for their “investments” by

feeding & clothing them

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Mental cruelty of slavery

A slave auction: human property

Separation of families

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How did southerners reason that slavery was correct?

• Slavery had existed throughout history• Slaves were better off in America than they

were in Africa• Slavery gave Africans the opportunity to

become Christians • Slaves had better lives than northern factory

workers

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YOUR TASK

• Using the notes from slides 1-15, create a 5-item quiz activity:

• -T or F• -Multiple choice• -Fill-in-the Blank• NO Q AND A• ***You will email it to me w/ a key

Page 17: Southern Society in the Pre-Civil Period

WHAT DO THESE PICTURES AND SONG REPRESENT

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

SONG: FOLLOW THE DRINKING GOURDLyrics: http://www.osblackhistory.com/drinkinggourd.php

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SLAVE RESISTANCE

• TWO TYPES: PASSIVE (quietly resisting or rebelling) and ACTIVE (loudly/boldly resisting or rebelling)

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PASSIVE RESISTANCE• 1. Pretending to be sick; self-vomiting->less work• 2. Pretending to suffer from food poisoning-->less work

• 3. Female slave pretending to be pregnant• 4. Destroyed crops; tools• 5. Organized work strikes (all slaves would slowdown work)

• 6. Pretending to not know something or how to do something

• 7. Maintaining own culture; refusing to assimilate– Accomplished with dance and song, folklore/stories

• 8. Slave songs with hidden messages about how to escape

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ACTIVE RESISTANCE1. Slave rebellions (exs:

--Nat Turner in Southampton, VA--Denmark Vesey (real name, Telemanque) in Charleston,SC--Gabriel Prosser in Richmond, VA

2. Escaping; running away to the Canada or Mexico (Underground Railroad--Harriet Tubman)

3. Use of arson4. Self-mutilation (meaning what?)5. Suicide (as we’ll see in the film Amistad)6. Rob, assault or murder slave masters and mistresses7. Poison slave owners’ food• Created maroon villages: a community of runaway slaves

called maroons that were set up in or near swamp lands and deep forests in the Sea Islands of S.C. and GA)

-- would go back to the plantations and attack the crops and livestock of the masters. -- influenced other slaves to join their communities.