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ECONOMIC REVOLUTION.

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Presentation on theme: "ECONOMIC REVOLUTION."— Presentation transcript:

1 ECONOMIC REVOLUTION

2 Economic Revolution Population Immigration Nativism
– cities increased, immigration highest in NE, river cities boom Nation’s mortality rates drop Immigration Between , Southern Irish and Germans are highest in numbers Irish potato famine Often stay in ethnic divided neighborhoods-ghettos Nativism Immigration causes resentment and stereotyping/prejudices ‘Low paying’ jobs, drinking, religion, even body cleanliness…. Native American party, become Know Nothing party…Know Nothings become American party (popular in big cities) hated Irish most of all (Irish need not apply)

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4 Transportation & Communication
By 1820s – rivers and steamboats become crucial to trade Canals become popular, Erie – West and East markets opened By 1840s – railroads primary shipping methods *** majority in North Telegraph – Morse, 1844 City newspapers – 1846, most from North, cause rift between South Pony Express provided mail service from Missouri to California

5 Commerce Expansion of business in cities for consumer goods
Corporations and shareholders gained popularity Insufficient credit – state banks issue bank notes = bank failures Factories – by 1820s, mostly NE Insufficient labor force Technology – interchangeable parts, division of labor, machinery Coal replaced water energy Goodyear perfected vulcanized rubber Mass production of iron from Ohio and Pennsylvania Most factories owned by stockholders, not one individual

6 Commerce Farming – ample land, workers, shipping
Lowell mill girls – ‘proper’ environment for young ladies, behaviors emphasized Most women had little options for work Working and pay conditions good, then turned very poor Eventually replaced by immigrants Immigrants Irish – unskilled labor, hard labor, low pay Factories – deskilling, lower prices, high artisan competition Trade unions – workers join forces to support Long hours, child labor laws non-existent Commonwealth vs. Hunt – unions are lawful organizations So many immigrants, “natives’” are often replaced Incomes steadily increase Wealth stays in cities, but so do most of poor - lots of social mobility – ‘rags to riches’ Many leave cities to go looking for land

7 Cult of Domesticity Social roles and rules of women set ‘in stone’
Republican motherhood Arranged marriages going away –more based upon love and companionship Mostly consumers – concentrate on home ‘Working class’ women usually go to factories on domestic servant positions Female Education still very limited in opportunities Home is seen as haven for families – maintained by women

8 Cult of Domesticity Middle Classes – growing Northern agriculture
Most women stay at home Diets improve, iceboxes, food transportation Indoor plumbing by 1850 Family- women centered / women provide morality to men Falling birth rates – birth control and abortions on the rise Northern agriculture Starts to move west Dairy, northern farming – mostly food production Chicago, Louisville, Cincinnati – meat packing, transportation, river determines population J. Deere – steel plows McCormick – automatic reaper

9 ANTEBELLUM SOUTH

10 Antebellum South Upper South and Piedmont – tobacco
Florida and Texas – sugar cane South Carolina, Georgia, Florida – rice Short staple cotton – by 1850s, cotton becomes main part of economy Lower South, cotton is King ½ of all exports leaving US is cotton, but most valuable to US was corn from South Limited transportation – relied on rivers Cotton depleted the land of nutrients, many farmers had only one crop Slaveless families and ‘po white trash’ even outranked the slave population Climate, South’s land price led to limited development of land Cavalier image of Southerners/ chivalry

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12 Antebellum South One slave sold at auction was roughly the cost back then as to a moderate car today Most families owned no slaves, most of slave owners were in South Carolina and Georgia – ¼ owned slaves By 1850s, the South owed the North 300 million, and northern factories depended on the southern cotton to make goods Planter classes become ‘royalty’ of South – ‘honor’ and defending that honor Southern ladies – love, honor, and obey husband Plain folk Most Southerners were yeoman farmers – sustenance Education inferior to North Farmers relied on plantation population for supplies, credit, farming equipment Poor whites – clay eaters and crackers (1/2 a million total)

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14 Slavery Laws, slave codes and of course auctions
Sizeable numbers of city slaves in South – many purchased their freedom, but by mid 19th cent, they were seen as threat to institution, so it virtually disappeared Slave cultures thrived on large plantations – overseers Slaves divided into tasks – house slaves usually hated or taunted by other farm slaves Black women often single mothers – 2 identities, sexual target and ‘mammy’ Free blacks influenced slaves in cities Segregation 250,000 in South, but poor By 1808, slave trade prohibited; On average – $

15 The Result of multiple whippings

16 Slavery ‘Necessary evil’ idea Slave revolts rare
1831 – Nat Turner – 60 whites killed, including children --- caused stricter codes and less ‘freeing’ of slaves in general Underground Railroad – 75,000 freed Tubman served in Union army during Civil war – was buried with full military honors Run away slaves high Pidgin language develops, art, music, religion (Christianity with voodoo) Families often split up – leads to matriarchal culture, still resonates today By 1836, Southern members of the House of Representatives had made talk of slavery forbidden – “gag rule” – not overturned until 1844

17 Antebellum Culture American Democratic Spirit is HIGH!
Literature – celebrated democratic principles W. Irving, Fenimore Cooper, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Edgar Allen Poe ***Art – Hudson River school ***Religion

18 Antebellum Culture ***Religion
Transcendentalists – individuals had reason and understanding – Ralph Emerson and Henry David Thoreau civil disobedience called for when unjust laws present Utopian Societies Nashoba – communal living for freed slaves Oneida community – sexual freedom from men Shakers – completely celibate Unitarians – all were saved – good works =salvation Mormons – Joseph Smith Brigham Young – to Salt Lake Belief in human perfectibility, polygamy, family most important

19 Revivalism By 1830s – temperance, education, poverty, mentally ill are all just causes and crusades for middle Christian class Every individual capable of salvation Alcohol blamed for crime, poverty, rape, family drama – alcoholism very high 1826 – American Society for Promotion of Temperance tried to make alcohol illegal arrival of many immigrants contributed to fear of ‘the drink’ Strongly opposed by immigrant population

20 Antebellum Culture Medicine Education Phrenology
E. Jenner – small pox vaccine Education By 1830s, public education was wanted by most states Horace Mann – saw education as only way to protect democracy Blacks exempted from education By 1850s – taxes paid for schools in all states Assimilation of Indians Benevolent Empire – to help handicapped Social values stressed, especially for girls

21 Antebellum Culture Rehabilitation – strict but compassionate theory
For criminals and mentally ill Dorthea Dix – fought for mentally ill and challenged rights Penitentiaries were overcrowded and unhealthy Indians By 1850s, reservations proposed to protect whites and Indians Stressed assimilation Feminism 1830s – Grimke sisters (abolitionists too) C. Beecher, L. Mott, E C Stanton Seneca Falls – 1848 Declaration of Sentiments – right to vote Supported by Quakers Lucretia Mott and Sojourner Truth

22 Abolition 1817 – American Colonization Society – wanted the gradual freeing of slaves By 1850, 200,000 freed slaves living in North and West – still segregated Colonization – wanted slaves returned to Africa – most popular in early abolition movements/ Liberia established Sojourner Truth – “Ain’t I a Woman?” Frederick Douglas – Anti-slavery paper – North Star Looked to politics to fix the slavery problem

23 Abolition William Lloyd Garrison
The Liberator – “an abomination in the sight of God” Think of the slaves, not the white landowners and the economy IMMEDIATE emancipation is necessary American anti-slavery society Probably the most radical of his day Anti-abolition – opposition from both North and South Abolitionists never went to Congress – not until mid 1800s Anti-slavery Free soil party – keep slavery and blacks out of federal territories Uncle Tom’s Cabin – Harriet Beecher Stowe – response to fugitive slave laws***really heats us sectional disputes on slavery “That little lady made this big war”

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