Title: The Economics of Slavery
1The Economics of Slavery
2Slave and plantation
- The prices of slaves went up
- In trade, the families would be separated
- The ownership of slaves became more concentrated
- an effective plantation was usually about 2,000
acres, they received an annual profit of 10 and
more
3- Some of the black people had some skills and they
were also very intelligent, but the southerners
didnt took that in concinderation to them - And also some of the white as black southerners
couldnt even read or write - And all this talent was wasted in something not
even worth it
4 Isaac Franklin and John Armfield
- Were one of the main people in the trading of
the slavery in the south - They collected slaves from Virginia and Maryland
from their modern jail - This Jail was called the Alexandria
- General Andrew Young was their office were they
did all their paper work
5Alexandria
http//www.innercity.org/holt/chron_1830_end.html
6Slave Prices Rise
- They also sell women, men and kids.
- 50.00
- Man 1,000-1,800 and a woman from 500 to
1,500.00 - This was when the war broke out
-
7- It cost about 32 to feed clothe and house a
slave - The South failed to develop a locally owned
marketing and transportation facilities - New York Capitalists gradually controlled much of
the Souths cotton and found its way to be sold
to manufacturers.
8Antebellum Plantation Life
- No typical plantation
- Medium size plantations operated like a small
village or self-sufficient colonial farm - Focus on cash crops especially cotton
- Masters house, barns, stables, mill, forge,
slave quarters - Slaverypeculiar institution
9Antebellum Plantation Life
- Husbands and wives not in separate spheres as
much as in the North - Fine imports purchased but much was done with
household manufacturing most food produced on
the plantation - Masters word was law
- Women maintained role as southern lady
10Antebellum Plantation Life
- Majority of slaves were field hands who worked
from dawn to dusk a few were household servants.
Work started at age 6 or 7. - Free and slave children were cared for by elderly
female slaves with the help of a girl - Simple, crude living conditions for slaves.
11The Sociology of Slavery
- By Joanna DaLuze
- Erin Remillard
12Slavery
- Most owners provided adequate clothing, housing,
and food for their slaves because they each slave
was very valuable property. - Infant mortality among slaves was twice the white
rate and life expectancy at least five years
less. - Slave population grew by natural increase.
13Slavery
- There was 1/2 million slaves imported and because
of their natural increase, by 1860 there were 4
million blacks in the U.S. - Owners felt responsibilities toward their slaves
and slaves were dependant upon their owners.
14Slaves Rights
- A slave had no rights.
- They developed a way of life by attempting to
resist oppression and injustice while
accommodating themselves to the system. - The marriage of two slaves had no legal status.
15Religion
- Slave religion was a combination of Christianity
with a little bit of their African origins. - Religious meetings, both secret and open,
provided slaves with the opportunity to organize
which sometimes led to rebellions. - Religion taught slaves that while their bodies
can be enslaved that their spirits could not be.
16Slave Behavior
- Many white observers of slavery said that slaves
were lazy. - Slaves did not like to work when they got nothing
in return for their labor. - Slaves were often happy which led owners to
believe that they accepted the system and
preferred slavery to the uncertainty of freedom.
17Rebellion
- As slaves rose in price and there was more
opposition from the North, masters took any
rebellious act very seriously. - Nat Turners revolt in Virginia in 1831 was the
most famous. 57 whites died before it was
suppressed. - Runaway slaves were treated brutally.
18Nat Turners Rebellion
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19Slavery
- Slavery did not flourish in cities and cities did
not grow in areas with slavery. - Southern whites did not like that there were free
blacks living among them. - Many southern states tried to pass laws to make
free blckas emigrate, but these laws were not
well enforced.
20Psychological Effects of Slavery
21- Slavery had a corrosive effect on free and
enslaved southerners. - Slaves were taught that they were worthless, and
often believed that this was true. - White owners became attached to the slaves and
then beat them for not behaving. - The female slaves were often raped by their
masters. - Free Slaves often bought and beat their own
slaves because they were taught it was right.
22Slave Names
- Slavery warped the whites, they made names to
describe their slaves personalities - Sambos - (m) means lazy subservient
- Bucks - (m) superpotent aggressive
- Mammys - (f) faithful and nurturing
- Jezebles - (f) wanton and seductive
23Slave Revolts
http//www.swagga.com/revolts.htm
24Slave Revolts
- Slaves often revolted against the plantation
owners. - They were quickly stopped every time but rarely
shot at because of their immense value. - I consider the labor of a breeding woman as no
object, and that a child raised every 2 years is
of more profit than the crop of the best laboring
man -- Thomas Jefferson
25Manufacturing in the South
26Manufacturing in the South
- Even though the temper of the south discouraged
business and commercial activities, manufacturing
developed - In Kentucky, there were rope making plants, in
Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee iron and coal
was mined - Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond in the 1950s did
an annual business of about 1 million dollars
27Tredegar Iron Works
http//web.ukonline.co.uk/b.gardner/tredegar/tredi
ron.htm
28Manufacturing in the South
- Less then 15 of all the goods manufactured in
the U.S. in 1860 came from the South - the South depended on the North for machinery,
skilled workers, technicians, financing, and for
insurance
29Manufacturing in the South
- Raw materials were available and water power
along the Appalachian slopes was abundant, making
it possible to manufacture textiles profitably - In Graniteville, South Carolina William Gregg
established a factory in 1846 - His factory employed about 300 people by 1850
30William Gregg
- Gregg believed the textile business could help
improve the lot of Souths poor whites - He wanted to weaken the southern prejudice
against manufacturing - He made his plant a model similar to the mills
of Lowell
31Northern Industrial Juggernaut
32Industry
- Period of rapid growth in industry in the North
before the Civil War, which started after the War
of 1812. - The country as a whole, manufactured 200 million
in goods in 1859. - In Pennsylvania, anthracite coal was produced,
which was transported through canals, for use in
steam power and metal working.
33Roger Burlingame
- Roger Burlingame compiled a list of industrial
advances created from 1825-1850 - This list included rubber production, the sewing
machine, lead pencil creation - He encouraged people to try new methods of
production
34U.S. at the top of Industry
- New production process used to make clocks,
rifles, and locks. - The British were amazed by the metalwork, sent
observers to the Springfield arsenal, saw
production of guns, and hired Americans to
produce guns for them.
35Science (1840-1865)
- Scientists fought to produce a National
institution for the promotion of science - In 1863, a bill passed, and the National Academy
of Science was debated in the senate.
36Immigration and its Effects
- Due to industrial growth, there was a great need
for laborers - In the West there were skilled artisans, but
there was a need for unskilled workers because
industry was more important than the independent
artisan - Immigration increased in 30s and 40s
- Many willing to be trained for jobs
37Foreign influences
- Immigrants helped the U.S. economy
- Therefore investors from Europe gave money to
various U.S. companies which was used in
transportation, and helped to abolish tariffs.
38Example of Immigration Growth
http//www.ops.org/north/curriculum/socstudies/Eth
nicB2/past/Irish.htm
39How the Wage Earners Lived
40How the Wage Earners Lived
- The indoor life was not good at all for the poor.
- Low standard of living for industrial workers.
- New York poor people lived in dark, rank cellars,
and some high tides. - Many tenement houses with little windows, not
many had heat or running water.
41How the Wage Earners Lived
- Outdoor life was terrible too for poor.
- Streets were littered with trash.
- Few recreational facilities.
- Ineffective police and fire departments.
- Children would literally beg to exist.
- Families maintained small vegetable gardens and
few chickens.
42Ellis Island
- This is Ellis Island immigration processing
center. - Immigrants were checked for diseases, and some
sent back due to bad health or other reasons. - http//cmp1.ucr.edu/exhibitions/Ellis_Christmas/X8
8064_4.jpg
43How the Wage Earners Lived
- Few workers belonged to unions.
- Skilled workers improved their lot during this
time. - The working day decreased to about 10 hours.
- There were many union movements in which work
strikes occurred.
44Progress and Poverty
45Progress and Poverty
- The industrial revolution was making the US the
most prosperous nation in the world, but it was
also creating a major poverty problem. - Within this rich nation there existed a class of
miserably derpaid unskilled workers, mostly
immigrants, whom in some cases were worse off
than slaves
46Progress and Poverty
- Marxian terminology, proletarian class and an
aristocracy of capitalists - The rich seemed to get richer and the poorer
seemed to get poorer - Economic opportunities were great and taxation
was minimal
47Canals and Railroads
- Lyndsay Gardner
- Jacquelyn London
48Canals
- From the time of the first settlers the Great
River was used to bring goods from farms to
markets. - In 1825 the Erie canal was constructed.
- By 1830 there were 1,277 miles of canal in the
U.S. - By 1840 there 3, 326 miles.
49Canals cont.
- 1845 most of the Erie Canals traffic went
through New York. - By 1851 most of its traffic came from west of
Buffalo. - The western commerce in 1851 was twenty times
greater than in 1836. -
50http//www.syracuse.com/features/eriecanal/intro.h
tml
51Railroads
- The expanding traffic in New York caused people
in other cities to make a new way of
transportation called the railroad. - The first railroads were built in England in the
1820s. - In 1830 the first American railroad was built.
52Railroads cont.
- The first railroad was named Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad. - It carried 80,000 passengers over a thirteen mile
stretch of track. - By 1833 Charleston South Carolina had a line that
was 136 miles on the Savannah River.
53Railroads cont.
- In 1835 cars began going on the Boston and
Worcester Railroad. - The panic of 1837 made construction slower.
- By 1840 the U.S. had 3,328 miles of track, which
was equal to the amount of miles of canals and
doubled the amount of railroad track in Europe.
54Railroads
- By 1848 there was 6,000 miles of track that all
were east of the Appalachian Mts. - Most of it had not been made into railroad
systems. - Many had different widths of track to make sure
other trains didnt go on the wrong track.
55Railroads
- The Erie had 537 miles of track and linked the
Hudson river to Dunkirk on Lake Erie. - In 1853 Erastus Corning made eight short lines
which connected Albany to Buffalo to form the New
York Central. - 1858 Pennsylvania Railroad connected Philadelphia
to Pittsburgh across the mts. - By 1860 the U.S. had 30,636 miles of track.
56http//www.b-orrstationmuseum.org/
571860 US RAILROADS
http//cc.owu.edu/rdfusch/railroads_1860.jpg
58Economy on the Eve of Civil war
- Every aspect of the economy was booming.
- The panic of 1857 soon followed suit.
- Upper Mississippi valley suffered most.
- When things started to get better the sectional
disputes arose.