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SLAVERY IN THE UNITED STATES

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Title: SLAVERY IN THE UNITED STATES


1
SLAVERY IN THE UNITED STATES
2
THE NEW SLAVE ECONOMY
  • Prices for tobacco and other staples declined
    toward the end of the 18th century as alternative
    sources for these crops appeared. Some hoped
    that would lead to a decline in the demand for
    slaves and their eventual disappearance.
  • The development of technology for spinning cloth,
    cleaning cotton, and raising new strains of
    cotton combined at the start of the 1800s to
    ensure a demand for slaves over the coming half
    century.
  • The demand for slaves increased over the next
    decades as the cotton they produced became
    Americas number one export. The average price
    for a prime field hand went from 200 in 1800 to
    600 by 1850.
  • Slavery and cotton spread across the South
    throughout the 19th century. Southerners thought
    of it as King Cotton as demand for the product
    grew each year and they believed supplying this
    demand gave them a great deal of economic and
    political clout.
  • This economic system ensured the South would
    remain largely rural, limit immigration from
    Europe, retard industrialization in the South,
    and create a cultural elite of slave owners who
    controlled society and poltics for the South.

3
Slave Owners
4
SLAVE OWNERS
  • Southern society was defined in large part by
    slave ownership. The upper class were the large
    plantation owners controlling large numbers of
    slaves.
  • In the South fewer than 300 families owned
    plantations with more than 200 slaves. This group
    often made up the political leadership, supplying
    Senators and Governors in most of the states as
    well as most of the Congressmen.
  • They also controlled much of the economy.
    Without large cities most trade and manufacturing
    in the South happened on the large plantations.
    Here poorer farmers would find docks for shipping
    their cotton, gins for cleaning, and storehouses
    to keep their cotton. Some slaves on these
    plantations provided necessary skilled labor.
    Other manufactured goods arrived at the docks of
    these plantations for transport or sale to other
    poorer farmers. Even those farmers who did not
    grow cotton found the market for their goods at
    the big plantations.
  • Much of the Southern middle class was involved
    directly or indirectly with slavery. They made
    up much of the 25 that owned 10 or fewer slaves.
  • Most owned only one or two slaves during their
    lifetime and during difficult times might have to
    sell their slaves. They often worked beside their
    slaves in the fields.
  • Because they only owned a few slaves, all of
    their slaves were field hands. They could not
    afford the extra slaves as household labor or
    skilled labor like on the big plantations.
  • At the bottom of White Southern society were the
    75 of non-slave owning whites. Some of these
    might own slaves briefly during their lifetime
    and more often rented slaves to help plant or
    bring in a crop.
  • Like their slave owning cousins they benefited
    from slavery through renting them. They also
    made use of the larger plantations as a market
    for their goods or a way to get their crops to
    market. They were also hired by the plantation
    owners to perform services including acting as
    overseers.
  • Poorer whites also benefited psychologically
    because no matter how poor they were they always
    had someone on the social ladder beneath them,
    slaves.

5
Slaves
6
SLAVE SOCIETY
  • The experience of most slaves was on the larger
    plantations. About 50 of all slaves spent part
    or most of their life on a plantation with 50 or
    more slaves.
  • Like the free society they lived under, slave
    society had its hierarchy. At the top were the
    household servants.
  • Household servants were the cooks, maids,
    butlers, nannies, etc, working and often living
    in the plantation house. They often had bedrooms
    in the attic of the large homes. They might
    often eat leftovers from the masters table and
    were often given better garments to clothe
    themselves. Their close relationship with their
    owners sometimes bred familial feelings and might
    lead to their manumission.
  • Below the household servants were the skilled
    craftsmen. These slaves had picked up a skill
    like carpentry or metal smithing. They often had
    quarters some distance from the rest of the
    slaves and the main house. They had more say
    over the pace of their work and were too hard to
    replace to punish severely. They could also earn
    extra income by working for local farmers with
    their masters permission.
  • Overseers were often grouped next when slaves
    were used for this job. Sometimes whites were
    hired to perform this function. On large
    plantations slaves were usually grouped in work
    gangs of approximately 20 slaves each. An
    overseer was responsible for making sure they did
    their work and did not run away. In return they
    did not work in the field.
  • At the bottom and the most common was the field
    hand. These were the ones who brought in the
    crop. Typically they lived in one or two room
    shacks built on raised platforms. On smaller
    farms they might live with the master or in a
    stable. In many cases they had a small plot of
    land to grow vegetables to enhance their meager
    rations of beans, corn meal, and occasionally
    bacon. They worked long hours and were
    physically punished if they did not perform well.

7
SLAVE CULTURE
  • Because of the prevalence of slaves throughout
    the South, they had an influence not only on
    their own culture but on white culture as well.
  • Slaves influenced the development of certain
    crops that they brought with them from Africa
    (peanuts, sorghum, etc).
  • Slaves influenced music in both style
    (spirituals, blues, jazz) and instruments
    (banjo). Music was a popular spare-time activity
    and was also used to control the pace of work.
  • Slaves influenced medicine and religious beliefs
    (voodoo and folk medicine).
  • Inside their own community they established norms
    to try and establish their own society and family
    structure.
  • Whites did not recognize slave marriage. Slave
    developed their own marriage customs.
  • Whites neglected African spirituality so they
    found their own religious leaders from among the
    elder males. These men also often became the
    community leaders and were respected for their
    wisdom.
  • Slaves maintained a strong oral tradition to keep
    their history and cultural values alive.

8
Runaway Advertisement
9
SLAVE RESISTANCE
  • Sabotage was a common form of slave resistance.
    Since slaves did not earn their share of profits
    for the work they performed they had no interest
    in their own productivity. They worked as little
    as possible. They also broke tools and damaged
    livestock to free themselves from labor
    activities. As a result of this activity Mules
    became the preferred beast of burden because they
    were studier than the faster horse and could take
    more punishment. This attitude was also
    encouraged by African folk tales of the
    trickster, a smaller animal able to overcome a
    stronger animal by tricking it.
  • Minor resistance also included acts of
    retaliation against whites in a passive manner.
    Creative insults could include spiting in food
    for the masters table or urinating in wells used
    by whites.
  • Running away was another form of resistance.
    Slaves could run to non-slave regions or run to
    isolated areas in the South where maroon
    communities were established. These communities
    were small towns made up entirely of run away
    slaves. They were often in swampy or mountainous
    areas.
  • Another possible response, though far less
    common, was the slave revolt. All of these
    failed in the U.S. They include Bacons
    Rebellion (1676), Stonos Rebellion (1739),
    Pointe Coupee Rebellions (1795/1811), Prossers
    Revolt (1800), the Vesey Plot (1822), and Nat
    Turners Revolt (1831).

10
Politics
11
SLAVERY AND POLITICS
  • The issue of slavery continually appeared in
    America from the creation of the Constitution to
    the Civil War. Although slavery was not always
    the only issue in theses events, it often was a a
    factor in the debate.
  • The Missouri Compromise (1820)
  • The South Carolina Nullification Crisis (1824)
  • The Annexation of Texas (1836,1845)
  • The Mexican American War (1846-48)
  • The Compromise of 1850
  • Bleeding Kansas (1854)
  • The Caning of Charles Sumner (1856)
  • The Dred Scott Case (1857)
  • The Raid on Harpers Ferry (1859)
  • The presidential election of 1860

12
Presidential Candidates and their Stand on
Slavery in 1860
  • Stephen Douglas (Northern Democrat)
  • Douglas favored the idea of popular sovereignty
    established by Lewis Cass. Based on the concept
    of states rights it left it up to each state to
    determine if it wanted to be free or slave. This
    ran counter to the Dred Scott decision and had
    failed to produce a clear result in Kansas. It
    tended not to favor Southerners.
  • John Breckenridge (Southern Democrat)
  • Breckenridge was nominated to force Douglas to
    resign so Democrats could chose a compromise
    candidate. When Douglas refused to resign
    Breckenridge stayed on the Southern ticket.
    Although not a supporter of secession,
    Breckenridge became the banner carrier for the
    Southern Democrats who sought protection of
    slavery and opposed Lincoln.
  • John Bell (Constitutional Union)
  • This party felt the issue of slavery was so
    divisive they did not take a stand. They hoped
    many Americans agreed with them that no good
    would come of discussing the issue and that if
    conflict was to be avoided slavery should not be
    debated on the national level.
  • Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
  • Lincoln had spoken out against the institution of
    slavery and did not agree with the Dred Scott
    decision. An early Conscience Whig, Lincoln felt
    slavery was immoral, but also did not feel the
    country was ready to end slavery or knew what to
    do with the slaves if they were freed. Lincoln
    did believe that Blacks were inferior to whites.
    He suggested that slavery not be permitted in
    western territories so he was against popular
    sovereignty. At no point during the election did
    he suggest emancipation of slaves during his term
    of office

13
Lincolns Image
14
CIVIL WAR POLICIES ON SLAVERY
  • UNION
  • Lincoln had no plans to free the slaves when he
    entered the White House. Many of Lincolns
    generals were more incline to free slaves seeing
    them as a tool which the South could use to win
    the war. In Aug. 1861 Congress passed the First
    Confiscation Act which gave Union officers the
    right to free slaves actively used by the
    Confederates in the War effort. The act was
    amended in 1862 top promise freedom to any slave
    who made it to Union lines. On September 22,
    1862 Lincoln announced the Emancipation
    Proclamation which held that all slaves in
    rebelling territories were free as of the first
    of the following year.
  • CONFEDERACY
  • Southerners had to address the possibility of
    slave revolts and that tied down troops to watch
    slaves that might have been sent to the front,
    hurting their war effort. Officer who took their
    slaves with them found these slaves often
    deserted at the first opportunity and often
    supplied the North with critical intelligence.
    Slaves were sometimes used in mass work gangs but
    their owners were reluctant to give them tot the
    army because they might be lost in combat or
    capture and they were often poorly treated and
    returned in bad condition. Slaves were also used
    in industry in the South for the first time.
    Toward the end of the war when things looked
    bleak for the South, the Confederate Congress
    finally passed a motion to allow slaves to serve
    in the military. Although the bill does not
    specifically state it, some assume these soldiers
    would have been emancipated. The South
    surrendered three weeks later.

15
The Black Vote
16
RECONSTRUCTION AND SLAVERY
  • Immediately after the war Congress passed the
    13th Amendment to the Constitution in 1865 ending
    slavery in the U.S. Other dates for emancipation
    in other nations include
  • Chile 1823
  • Mexico 1829
  • British Colonies 1838
  • French and Danish Colonies 1848
  • Dutch Colonies 1863
  • Spanish Colonies except Cuba 1870-1873
  • Cuba 1886
  • Brazil 1888
  • Emancipation was followed by a series of acts
    designed to give the freed slaves political
    rights during Reconstruction. By failing to
    provide economic opportunities the freedmen were
    forced to return to their former masters for jobs
    as agricultural workers under a sharecropping
    system. This placed them in an impoverished
    position which damaged their chances for true
    freedom and equality.
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