Title: Antebellum Southern Society: Whites
1Antebellum Southern SocietyWhites
Ante means before
Bellum means the war
2Southern Society in 1850
Slave-ocracy(plantation owners)
6,000,000
The Plain Folk(small slave-owners yeoman
farmers)
250,000
Black Freemen
3,200,000
Black Slaves
U.S. population in 1850 was 23,000,0009,500,000
lived in the South (40)
3Southern White Class Structure, 1860
4White Society in South
- Only a small percentage of whites owned large
plantations - Less than 1 of the white population owned 50
slaves - Most whites were yeomen farmers who supported
slavery because they hired slaves or felt
reassured that there was a lower class than them
5If these were the living conditions for slaves on
a plantation, what were conditions like on small
farms?
6Yeomen Farmers
- About 75 of Southern whites were small, yeoman
farmers who did not own slaves - Most yeomen resented the aristocratic planters
but hoped to become wealthy planters - Many saw slavery as a way of keeping blacks "in
their place" - Many saw abolition as a threat to their Southern
way of life
7Antebellum Southern SocietySlaves
8Distribution of Slave Labor, 1850
950 of all slaves lived in the Black Belt
(Cotton Belt)
10Slaves Workingin a Sugar-Boiling House, 1823
Some slaves could hire out their overtime hours
for pay (Underground Economy)
11Slave Families Community
- Normal family life was difficult
- Families were vulnerable to breakup by their
masters - On large plantations, slaves were able to retain
their African cultures were mostly part of
two-parent families - But on smaller farms, extended families provided
support or adoption of unrelated slaves
12A Slave Family
13Free Blacks in the Old South
- Southern free blacks were severely restricted
- Had to register with the state carry freedom
papers - Were excluded from certain jobs
- Subjected to re-enslavement fraudulent
recapture - By 1860 some states proposed laws to force free
blacks to leave the state or be enslaved