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Chapter 7- Balancing Nationalism and sectionalism Sophomore American History Regional Economies Create Differences 1800s- Factories became the new centers of Industry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter%207-%20Balancing%20Nationalism%20and%20sectionalism


1
Chapter 7- Balancing Nationalism and
sectionalism
  • Sophomore American History

2
Regional Economies Create Differences
  • 1800s- Factories became the new centers of
    Industry- American Industrial Revolution
  • Read- The Industrial Revolution in the United
    States- Page 213
  • New England industrializes
  • Had depended heavily on trade- Agriculture was
    not profitable
  • 1793- Samuel Slater/ 1813- Lowell System/ 1822-
    Expansion- Read Page 213
  • Two Economic Systems Develop
  • Northeasterners started to invest heavily into
    manufacturing
  • 1790s- South was making huge profits from the
    production of cotton- Cotton Gin/ Slavery
  • King Cotton- Britain and the Northeastern United
    States- by 1820 Slavery became entrenched
  • Deep South and the Cotton Belt
  • Agriculture in the North/ Slavery in the North
  • Clay and the American System- read pages 216-217
  • Tariff of 1816- North supported South did not
  • Court Cases- Gibbons v Ogden, McCulloch v
    Maryland, Fletcher v Peck

3
DEEP SOUTH
4
NORTH AND SOUTH
  • NORTH
  • Primarily Industrial
  • Encouraged trade and industry
  • Supported the Tariff of 1816
  • Encouraged growth of towns
  • Improved Communication
  • Improved Transportation
  • New Technology- Change
  • Few Northerners traveled south
  • Emphasis on education
  • SOUTH
  • Primarily agriculture
  • Little technological progress
  • No need for labor-saving devices
  • Higher value on tradition-little change
  • Lack of education
  • Slavery was legal, a large part of the economy-
    pg 259
  • Few southerners traveled north

5
Chapter 7- Nationalism Guides Foreign Policy
  • After the War of 1812, Americans were confident
    in the strength of their growing country.
    Waiting to take their place on the world stage
  • James Monroe-1816-Era of Good Feelings
  • Diplomatic Success
  • Rush-Bagot Treaty 1818- Disarmament along the
    Canada-U.S. border
  • Adams-Onis Treaty 1819 Acquired Florida from
    Spain
  • Monroe Doctrine (221)

6
The Missouri CompromiseChapter 7
  • The nation was dealing with political conflict
    dealing with expansion and the slavery issue
  • House of Rep. was controlled by the northern
    states. Why?
  • The Senate supported slavery. Why?
  • As long as Congress was split, slavery was safe.
  • States were divided equally- 11 Slave States and
    11 Free States
  • In 1819 Missouri applied for statehood- Problems

7
The Missouri Compromise
  • Missouris admission would upset the
    Congressional balance in the Senate!
  • Tallmadges Proposal
  • The Missouri Compromise- 1820
  • Admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a
    free state
  • Slavery banned above the 36-30 Line
  • Missouri would be the only exception
  • SLAVERY WAS NOT PROFITTABLE IN MISSOURI
  • Henry Clay

8
1824 Election
  • By 1820s, voting laws were becoming more
    democratic.
  • Most adult white males could vote
  • State nominating conventions
  • THE ELECTION OF 1824 HAD FIVE STRONG CANDIDATES
  • Jackson Clay Adams
  • William Crawford of Georgia- Early favorite-
    Southern Candidate- became ill and never
    threatened
  • John Calhoun, South Carolina- Failed to build a
    national following
  • John Quincy Adams of Mass.- Economic
    nationalists, antislavery views, Northeast
  • Andrew Jackson form Tenn.- Popular military hero-
    popular in the South and the frontier
  • Henry Clay from Kentucky- Support from the Middle
    West

9
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10
Corrupt Bargain- 1824
  • Jackson received the most popular votes and
    electoral votes, but no candidate won a majority
    of the electoral votes. The House of Rep would
    decide.
  • Top three would be voted on by the House
  • Jackson
  • Adams
  • Crawford- dropped out
  • CORRUPT BARGAIN- PAGE 239

11
Election of 1828
  • Jackson and the 1828 election
  • 1st Modern Election
  • Voting rolls swelled, many states dropped land
    ownership requirements
  • Jacksonian Democracy
  • Spoils system
  • Rotation in Office

12
American Indian Policy
  • Indian Policy Under Jefferson
  • Jefferson had hoped that the Eastern Indians
    would become farmers and blend into American
    society.
  • By 1824 many government officials were calling
    for the removal of all American Indians to lands
    beyond the U.S. borders
  • Many Indian tribes had begun to adapt to American
    ways.
  • Five Civilized Tribes
  • Cherokee
  • Sequoya

13
Jacksons Indian Policy
  • INDIAN TERRITORY
  • Indians in the Southeast occupied millions of
    acres of fertile lands. Farmers and land
    speculators wanted the Indians out.
  • Jackson agreed
  • 1830- Indian Removal Act- Provided for the
    relocation, by force if necessary, of the Indians
    to Oklahoma. IT WILL BE YOURS FOREVER

14
Native American Resistance
  • Second Seminole War (1835-1842)- Cost more money
    and lives than any other Indian War in history.
    Most Seminole Indians were either killed or moved
    to the Indian Territory
  • Worcester v Georgia- The Cherokees fought for
    their rights through the courts. The Supreme
    Court ruled in favor of the Cherokees
  • Pg. 248- The Trail of Tears

15
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16
Chapter 8
  • Section 2, Slavery and Abolition

17
THE SOUTHERN ECONOMY
  • Eli Whitney made cotton production profitable
    with the invention of the Cotton Gin.
  • Upper South
  • Lower South- COTTON BELT
  • By 1860 cotton represented more than half of all
    American exports- KING COTTON
  • Planters began to open new lands for cultivation.
    COTTON BELT
  • As cotton production grew, so did the demand for
    slaves.
  • By 1860 the population of the south was about 12
    million people. 4 million were slaves.
  • The Cotton Gin

18
THE SOUTHERN ECONOMY
  • Farming cotton was a labor-intensive enterprise-
    pg. 258
  • Planters- Controlled large plantations
  • Social, economic and political control of the
    South

19
SLAVE LABOR
  • 75 OF ALL SLAVES WERE FIELD HANDS
  • Worked from dawn to dusk- 18-20 hours during
    harvest
  • Some worked as household workers- cooks, nannies,
    maids
  • Some were skilled laborers- Blacksmiths,
    Carpenters, gardeners
  • Page 285-286

20
SLAVE LIFE
  • Housing- Cramped and sparsely furnished. A family
    would live in a one-room cabin
  • Cold in the winter, hot in the summer, and did
    not keep out the elements.
  • Food- Some given to the slave by the owners.
  • Hunted and fished
  • Small gardens
  • Poor clothing

21
THE BURDEN OF BONDAGE

HISTORYS VOICES
We lodged in huts and on the bare ground In a single room were huddled, like cattle, ten or a dozen persons, men, women, and children. All ideas of refinement and decency were, of course, out of the question. There were neither bedsteads, nor furniture of any description. Our beds were collections of straw and old rags, thrown down in the corners and boxed with boards, a single blanket the only covering The wind whistled and the rain and snow blew in through the cracks, and the damp earth soaked in the moisture till the floor was muddy as a pigsty.
Josiah Henson, Uncle Toms Story of His Life An Autobiography of the Rev. Josiah Henson, 1877
HISTORYS VOICES
22
TREATMENT OF SLAVES
  • Slave treatment varied from plantation to
    plantation.
  • Some owners used rewards- food, clothing, days
    off
  • Some owners used fear of punishnment.
  • Sweat Box
  • Whipping
  • Sold away from family
  • More severe punishment

23
How Did Slaves Fight Back
  • Pages 285-286
  • Free Blacks
  • North 250,000
  • South 250,000
  • Slave Revolts
  • Nat Turner- 1830
  • Escape
  • Underground Railroad
  • Harriet Tubman

24
Abolition Movement- Pg 288
  • Religious Roots
  • Colonial Period- Quakers- Condemened slavery as
    immoral
  • William Lloyd Garrison- 1831- Liberator
  • American Anti-Slavery Society
  • Fredrick Douglass
  • Page 288

25
Opposition to Abolition
  • Most southerners viewed abolition as an attack on
    their way of life.
  • Justification of slavery
  • Essential to the economy
  • Religion
  • Better off than northern Wage Slaves
  • Northern support for slaves- Competition for jobs

26
Southern Manufacturing
  • Southern industries included sawmills, iron
    works, textile mills, brick yards, and railroads
  • Industry developed more slowly in the South than
    in the North.
  • By 1860- South had 35 of the population but only
    15 of its manufacturing. This occurred for
    several reasons
  1. Most investments went into slaves and land.
  2. Planters used their influence, wealth, and power
    to support agriculture
  3. Shortage of factory workers. (slavery discouraged
    immigration)
  4. Most of the rural population (poor whites and
    blacks) had no economic power. (purchasing power)

27
Southern Attitudes Toward Slavery
  • Some southerners criticized slavery for the
    following reasons (Southern Minority)
  • An economy based on plantation agriculture and
    slave labor was less profitable than one based on
    industry and labor.
  • Slavery is incompatible with the American
    Revolution- Liberty and freedom
  • Slavery is inhuman and immoral

28
Southern Attitudes Toward Slavery
  • Supporters of Slavery
  • Slaves were the only way to assure enough labor
    for cotton and tobacco production.
  • Planters provided slaves with shelter, clothing,
    food and care in sickness and old age. Slaves
    cost 1,500 a piece
  • George Fitzhugh- Page 271

29
Southern Society
  • PLANTERS
  • Lived elegantly in beautiful tree shaded mansions
  • Manage the plantations
  • Planning and supervising work
  • Keeping records of business transactions
  • Keeping tracts of orders and brokers
  • The majority of planters owned fewer than 20
    slaves
  • Planters wives supervised household activities.

30
Southern Society
  • SMALL FARMERS
  • Made up a majority of southern whites
  • Simple two room log cabins
  • Raised livestock and sold some crops for cash.
  • Fertile land lacked easy access to markets
  • Grew and hunted own food
  • Most did not own slaves

31
Southern Society
  • POOR WHITES
  • Small percentage of the souths population
  • Farmed the least productive land
  • Lived in rough cabins with few comforts
  • Suffered from medical problems
  • No slaves

32
SLAVE LABOR
  • Overseer- managed the slaves
  • Drivers- Slaves who helped manage the slaves
  • Gang Labor- Assign groups of slaves to do
    specific jobs

33
SLAVE CULTURE
  • Slaves created a unique African culture
  • Folktales
  • Music and Art
  • Slave Religion
  • Sprituals
  • Rebellion and Resistance
  • Gabriel Prosser- 1800, Richmond, Virginia
  • Denmark Vessey- 1822, Charleston, South Carolina
  • Nat Turner- 1831, Virginia
  • Harriet Tubman- Underground Railroad
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