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The Worlds of North & South (mid-1800s)

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Presentation on theme: "The Worlds of North & South (mid-1800s)"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Worlds of North & South (mid-1800s)
Chapter 19 tci

2 GEOGRAPHY & CLIMATE NORTH SOUTH
• Warm, humid summers and cold snowy winters • Short growing season plus cold made farming difficult. • Clear, fast rivers • Coastline full of bays. • Cities develop near rivers and bays. • Cities develop as trading centers. • People begin to use waterpower to run factories • Warm and sunny long summers, mild winters. Increased amounts of rain. • Climate ideal for agriculture. • Fertile soil ideal for growing crops.

3 GEOGRAPHY & CLIMATE NORTH SOUTH

4 ECONOMY NORTH SOUTH The economy of the North was based on manufacturing. • Many immigrants from Europe began working in factories and producing goods used by people in the North. • Many factories began producing textiles (cloth) with the cotton grown in the South. The economy of the South was based on agriculture. • Cotton, tobacco, rice, sugar cane, and indigo (a plant that was used for blue dye) were sold as cash crops.  • Cotton became the most important crop after Ely Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin. • More slaves were now needed to pick the cotton. • Slavery became essential to the South’s economy.

5 ECONOMY NORTH - industrialism (factories)
SOUTH – agrarian (agriculture)

6 ECONOMY

7 TRANSPORTATION NORTH SOUTH
• Canals were mostly in the North. • The Erie Canal was a huge success. • Most of the railroads were in the North. • 30,000 miles of track was laid by • Canals and railroads allowed northern businesses to grow. • dependent on the steamship. • Railroads existed, but far less than in the North.

8 TRANSPORTATION North - Railroad South - Steamboat

9 SOCIETY SOUTH NORTH • The culture of the South was determined by the upper class plantation owners and their families. Wealth = amount of slaves you owned Dominated by small group of wealthy plantation owners • Only children of plantation owners received any education. Girls = trained to be wives & hostesses Small farmers had little or no education Worked own farms African Americans Large portion = slaves (no rights, education) Small portion = free; badges, taxes; lived in cities as servants, craftsman, skilled laborers The culture of the North was determined by life in the cities. • religion & education = organized.  • schools and churches in most towns • Very few boys, and almost no girls went on to secondary school until ed. Reform pushed • College = reserved for wealthy *Large immigrant population from Ireland & Germany Increase in urban living (increase in unsanitary conditions too!)

10 SOCIETY NORTH SOUTH

11 READING FURTHER: The Mill Girls of Lowell
Describe life in Lowell in the mid-1800s: Describe the factories in Lowell:

12 READING FURTHER: The Mill Girls of Lowell


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