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Slavery and the Old South

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Oppression and Resistance The Old Plantation-ca. 1800 What does this painting tell us about slave life? What does it obscure? (Think it ll come up again.) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slavery and the Old South


1
Slavery and the Old South
  • Oppression and Resistance

2
The Old Plantation-ca. 1800
  • What does this painting tell us about slave life?
  • What does it obscure? (Thinkitll come up again.)

3
The Structure of Rural White Society
4
Large Planters
  • Best education
  • Political and social leaders
  • Employ overseers to run plantations
  • Smallest group
  • Emphasize chivalry, honor, and hospitality

5
Small Planters
  • Many more than large planters, but still a
    relatively small social group
  • Some political power
  • Generally do not employ overseers
  • Aspire to rise to the class of large planters,
    but the expense of slaves generally prevents this

6
Yeoman Farmers
  • Some own a few slaves
  • Raise a variety of crops
  • Largest white group
  • Could vote/hold office
  • Strong supporters of slavery
  • Aspire to rise to planter class

7
Mountain Whites
  • Live isolated in Appalachian Mtns.
  • Self-sufficient farmers
  • Nationalists who oppose the power of the planters
    and the slavery system
  • Most fight for the Union in the Civil War

8
Poor Whites
  • Rarely own land
  • Work as tenants or day laborers
  • Looked down on by most other whites
  • Tend to refuse slave work
  • Health problems and malnutrition common
  • Strong supporters of slavery

9
The Institution of Slavery
  • Most Southern Whites owned NO slaves
  • Most slaves lived on plantations with a hundred
    or more slaves
  • So, who controlled slavery and antebellum
    Southern society?
  • Slavery did not benefit most whites, yet most
    Southern whites supported the institution. Why?

10
Conditions of Slavery
  • About 4 million slaves in the antebellum South at
    slaverys peak
  • Most live in separate slave quarters on
    plantations
  • Maintain families, religion, and traditions
    despite slavery
  • Labor systems gang and task system
  • Have no legal rights

11
The Slave Trade
  • The Middle Passage was a devastating and
    dangerous experience
  • Slaves were packed tightly into ships. Many died
    of disease.
  • The U.S. ended the international slave trade in
    1808, though illegal smuggling did continue

12
Separation of Families
13
Physical Torture
  • The use of physical punishment was common, though
    generally not as brutal as in the Caribbean
  • One slave might be singled out for punishment to
    serve as an object lesson to others
  • Women faced the added threat of rape by masters

14
Slave Quarters
15
(No Transcript)
16
Free Blacks Always Faced the Danger of Being
Returned to Slavery
17
Hidden Transcripts
  • Difference between public and private speech and
    behavior
  • Difference between what is said and what is meant
    when what is really meant is not likely to be
    understood by someone from outside the group
  • How might slaves have used hidden transcripts
    to deal with bondage?

18
Agency and Resistance
  • Working slowly
  • Sabotaging tools and machinery
  • Feigning illness
  • Running away for brief periods or permanently
  • Self-mutilation
  • Suicide and infanticide

19
Slave Rebellion
  • Slave revolts were uncommon in the United States,
    though whites feared them greatly
  • The lack of a population majority as well as a
    place to go in case of successful rebellion
    tended to mitigate the tendency toward rebellion
  • Slave codes became much more restrictive in the
    South whenever a rebellion occurred, especially
    after the successful revolt on San Domingue
    (Haiti) led by Toussaint LOverture

20
Gabriels Rebellion-1800 Virginia
  • Gabriel Prosser planned an assault on the
    Richmond armory to arm themselves and destroy
    slavery in Virginia
  • After the Revolution many slaves had greater
    freedom of movement, especially those like
    Gabriel who worked on the water
  • Gabriels plan was given away by a fellow slave
    before the revolt could take place, and Gabriel
    and the other leaders of the plot were executed

21
Denmark Vesey-1822
  • Born in Africa, he purchased his freedom after
    winning 1500 in a lottery
  • He organized about 9000 others in the black
    community to revolt in Charleston, SC
  • The plot was given away before it could go
    forward and Vesey and over 40 others (including 4
    whites) were hanged

22
Nat Turner-1831
  • A preacher among the slave population of
    Southampton, Virginia
  • Had a series of visions of two armies clashing in
    the sky and took this as a sign that he should
    lead a rebellion to destroy slavery
  • Led his followers in a surprise attack on
    slaveholding families, beginning with his own
    masters
  • Over 60 whites were killed in the insurrection,
    most of them hacked to death with machetes
  • After spending several months hiding in the
    Dismal Swamp, Turner and his followers were
    captured, tried, and executed

23
Fear of Slave Revolts Greatly Increases and Slave
Codes are Made More Restrictive in the Wake of
the Massacre
24
The Confessions of Nat Turner
25
Classes in Slave Society
26
Southern Defense of Slavery
  • Early on, slavery was generally viewed by white
    Southerners as a necessary evil, but as it came
    under increasing attacks nationally, Southerners
    began to defend the peculiar institution as a
    positive good in society
  • Defenders include Thomas Dew, John C. Calhoun,
    and William J. Grayson

27
Arguments Used in Defense of Slavery
  • The master/servant relationship is familial, like
    a parent/child relationship (patriarchal system)
  • The Bible accepts slavery
  • Slavery existed in the great historical
    civilizations like Greece and Rome
  • Slavery is Gods will because slaves are suited
    to their condition
  • Slaves are happy
  • The system of slavery allows young, old, and sick
    slaves to be cared for

28
Major Arguments Used Against Slavery
  • Slavery is in opposition to the founding ideals
    of the United States democracy, equality,
    liberty
  • The Declaration of Independence says All men are
    created equal.
  • Slavery is a violation of basic human rights
  • Slavery is immoral
  • Slavery allows for the commission of horrendous
    physical abuse
  • The Bible abhors slavery (esp. New Testament)

29
The Old Plantation-ca. 1800
  • What does this painting tell us about slave life?
  • What does it obscure?
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