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Bell Ringer – 12/9/08 1.Why couldn’t cotton be grown in the Upper South? 2.Name 2 crops tended by slaves in the Upper South. 3.Define “nationalism”.

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Presentation on theme: "Bell Ringer – 12/9/08 1.Why couldn’t cotton be grown in the Upper South? 2.Name 2 crops tended by slaves in the Upper South. 3.Define “nationalism”."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bell Ringer – 12/9/08 1.Why couldn’t cotton be grown in the Upper South? 2.Name 2 crops tended by slaves in the Upper South. 3.Define “nationalism”.

2 Test is THURSDAY Covers: –Chapter 6 (Hamilton, Washington, Lewis & Clark, Jefferson, War of 1812) –Chapter 7 (Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson, Indian Territory) –Chapter 8 (Lowell Girls, Cotton Gin, Southern slavery & life) –Notebooks & Study Guides due on Thursday

3 Changes to Study Guide ON BACK: –X “First Seminole War” – add Whiskey Rebellion –X “Samuel Worcester” – add Embargo Act of 1807 –X “Tredegar Iron Works” – add Trail of Tears

4 Georgia Slave Cabin

5 Slave Revolts Denmark Vessey - Free Af- Am carpenter and preacher. Planned a huge slave uprising near Charleston Nat Turner - led a violent slave result in Virginia soon after. Killed 60 whites in the area.

6 Whiskey Rebellion – 1791 protest against federal taxes on whiskey

7 The Whig Party (1833-1856) Didn’t like Andrew Jackson’s policies, mocked him “King Andrew” Supported by growth of the new middle class during the 1800s Whigs used the campaign “Tippecanoe & Tyler too” to get William Henry Harrison elected as president in 1840. He died one month after taking office.

8 The Indian Removal Act 1830, it relocated Indian nations (tribes) living east of the Mississippi to Oklahoma Pres. Jackson said Indians should move West, where “their white brothers will not trouble them”

9 Indians were sent west to Oklahoma

10 “Trail of Tears”

11 Market Revolution Reduced the cost of manufactured products Farmers bought farm machines Families now bought cloth at markets

12 Southern Economy Despite the plantation stereotype, the South was, in reality, a complex region. Large slaveholders were extremely rare. However, although large slaveholders were few in number, they owned most of the South’s slaves. Slave ownership was relatively widespread. About 1/3 of all southern white families owned slaves. Slaveowners were a diverse lot. A few were African American, mulatto, or Native American; one-tenth were women; and more than one in ten worked as artists or merchants rather than as farmers or planters. Few led lives of leisure or refinement. The average slaveowner lived in a log cabin rather than a mansion and was a farmer rather than a planter.

13 Southern Economy Planters and wives had to work hard to earn wealth; only a small amount were wealthy Markets were far away – most Southerners lived on corn and pork Slaves were encouraged to be Christian. Many slaves kept their culture through family ties and story-telling. Yeoman farmers – small, poor farmers who live off their land and resources


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