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Antebellum South Carolina

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Antebellum South Carolina Chapter 12 Section One Slavery in South Carolina I. Slaves and Work A. Slaves were known by the work that they did. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Antebellum South Carolina


1
Antebellum South Carolina
  • Chapter 12

2
Section OneSlavery in South Carolina
  • I. Slaves and Work
  • A. Slaves were known by the work that they did.
  • 1. House Servants cooks, butlers. They were
    on call 24 hours a day.
  • 2. Yard Servants worked as blacksmiths,
    carpenters, etc. They lived in the shop where
    they worked.
  • 3. Field Hands worked in the fields and lived
    in slave cabins on the street.

By 1850, cotton growing and the plantation system
were more than an economic venture in South
Carolina, they were a way of life. And slavery
was an integral part of that way of life.
3
Slaves and work continued
  • Field hands were classified once a year by the
    amount of work they did. The overseer was the
    person who was responsible for seeing that slaves
    performed the tasks assigned to them
  • 1. Quarter Hands very young and very old.
  • 2. Half Hands boys, girls, mothers with young
    children.
  • 3. Full Hands full day of work.

4
Slaves and work continued
  • Plantation work was organized in two ways
  • 1. Task System (Rice Plantation) when their
    daily task was completed they could work in their
    gardens or hunt and fish.
  • 2. Gang System (Cotton Plantation) they
    worked from sun up to sun down in the cotton
    fields.

5
II. Slave Life
  1. Most slaves were poorly fed, housed, and clothed.
  2. The slaves of planters got clothes twice a year
    and shoes once a year.
  3. Slave families had gardens and sometimes were
    allowed to fish and hunt.
  4. Slave children were often sold to other planters.
  5. Discipline on the plantation was a system of
    rewards and punishments.

6
  • The men and women slaves received, as their
    monthly allowance of food, eight pounds of pork,
    or its equivalent in fish, and one bushel of corn
    meal. Their yearly clothing consisted of two
    coarse linen shirts, one pair of linen trousers,
    like the shirts, one jacket, one pair of trousers
    for winter, made of coarse negro cloth, one pair
    of stockings, and one pair of shoes the whole of
    which could not have cost more than seven
    dollars. The clothing allowance of the slave
    children was given to their mothers, or the old
    women having the care of them. The children
    unable to work in the field had neither shoes,
    stockings, jackets, nor trousers, given to them
    their clothing consisted of two coarse linen
    shirts per year. When these failed them, they
    went naked until the next allowance-day. Children
    from seven to ten years old, of both sexes,
    almost naked, might be seen at all seasons of the
    year.

Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845)
7
III. Slave Culture
  • The most important unit of slave communities was
    the family.
  • Even though slave marriages were against the law
    in some states, most owners allowed their slaves
    to marry.
  • Slaves would often participate in an old African
    wedding custom and jump the broom after a
    marriage ceremony.
  • By the early 1800s, many slaves were Christians
    and they expressed their religious beliefs
    through the singing of spirituals.
  • (Read Slave Music page 303)

8
IV. Free Blacks
  1. A mothers legal status, slave or free,
    determined her childrens status at birth.
  2. Free blacks, fewer than 10,000 in 1860, tended to
    work in cities and towns.
  3. Free blacks were often discriminated againstthey
    were denied rights or treated unfairly they
    could not vote in South Carolina.
  4. Free black William Ellison, of Statesburg, owned
    more than 50 slaves.

9
V. Challenging Slavery
  • Slaves rebelled against the slave system by using
    work slowdowns or running away. Some runaways
    returned with-in a few days.
  • Why do you suppose they returned to the horrors
    of slavery?
  • B. As the number of slaves increased, fears of
    revolts increased Planters lived in fear that a
    slave revolt would occur.
  • C. The most violent slave revolt was Nat Turners
    Rebellion which took place in Virginia.
  • D. 60 white people in the area were killed. More
    than 100 slaves were killed in an attempt to put
    down the rebellion. Turner was captured and
    later hanged.
  • In South Carolina, there were two attempted slave
    revolts. One was the Stono Rebellion and the
    second was the Denmark Vesey Plot.

10
Section 2 Class System and Reform
  • The Southern Class System
  • A. Distinct social classes evolved in the
    South.
  • 1. Planters the elite the highest class
  • 2. Small farmer the largest group
  • 3. Poor whites owned no land often
    became tenant farmers
  • B. Slaves were at the of the social ladder and
    free blacks were unsure where they fit.

11
Slave Rebellions in S.C.
  • Read pages 31 and 102-103 in blue South Carolina
    books
  • Copy and answer the following questions
    concerning these two South Carolina slave
    rebellions.
  • Explain the Stono Rebellion and its outcome.
  • What was put in place as a result of this
    rebellion?
  • Who was Denmark Vesey and how did he gain his
    freedom?
  • Explain the Denmark Vesey Plot and its outcome.
  • How did these two revolts differ? In what ways
    were they the same.

12
  • Stono Rebellion
  • Largest slave uprising prior to American
    Revolution.
  • Rebel slaves in SC led by Jemmy killed a
    storekeeper, and stole his guns and powder .
  • As they headed south, they recruited nearly 100
    other slaves for their cause.
  • The rebellion was put down, however, by a large
    group of farmers.
  • 20 slaves were killed during the rebellion and 40
    more were later hanged or executed.
  • Harsh slave codes put in place after this revolt
  • Denmark Vesey Plot
  • http//www.africawithin.com/bios/denmark_vesey.htm
  • An attempted slave revolt plot headed up by freed
    slave, Denmark Vesey.
  • The revolt never actually occurred because there
    was a leak among the conspirators.
  • Those orchestrating the plot were rounded up and
    thrown in jail.
  • In all 100 people were arrested in connection
    with the rebellion with over 30 of them,
    including Vesey being sentenced to death.

13
Slave Codes
  • Slave Codes
  • Slaves could not meet without a white man present
  • Slaves could not travel without written
    permission
  • Slaves could not learn to read or write
  • Slaves could not raise and store their own food.
  • Slaves could not communicate with drums, horns,
    or other loud instruments.
  • F. As a result of these rebellions strict slave
    codes were put in place. These codes were put in
    place to prevent any more uprisings by
    controlling slaves.

14
VI. Opposition to Slavery
  1. Sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke, raised in a
    slave-holding family, wrote and lectured against
    slavery
  2. Slave revolts, such as the Nat Turner, prompted
    most southern whites to keep silent about any
    abolitionist (anti-slavery) views.
  3. Many South Carolinians started defending slavery
    as it was attacked by abolitionists.

15
II. Reform Movements
  • A. Prison reform the mentally ill and real
    criminals were housed in the same jails. The
    mentally ill were moved to asylums.
  • B. Education reform there were a few normal
    schools which were public schools with teachers,
    but most schools were still private academies.
  • 1. SC had some schools for blacks even though
    it was against the law to educate slaves.
  • 2. Some private colleges opened and most were
    church sponsored schools.

16
Section 3 Industry and Railroads
  • The Start of Industry
  • A. The pottery industry was one of the first
    industries in the state.
  • B. William Gregg opened a textile mill in
    Graniteville.
  • 1. Gregg built and entire village.
  • 2. Entire families were hired to work in the
    mill.
  • 3. The average workday was 12 hours.
  • A Growing Population
  • A. Blacks far outnumbered whites in all areas
    of the state.
  • B. Most South Carolinians lived in small
    towns.

17
III. Railroads
  • A. To bring business into Charleston, SC built
    a railroad from Charleston to Hamburg.
  • B. In 1833, the SC railroad was 136 miles long
    and was the longest railroad in the world.
  • C. The Best Friend of Charleston was the first
    locomotive in SC.
  • D. The SC railroads expanded and increased
    trade and economic conditions in the state.
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