Currier & Ives, Cotton Plantation. Growing Black Population 600% increase in black population, 179...
-
Upload
samantha-cusson -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
1
Transcript of Currier & Ives, Cotton Plantation. Growing Black Population 600% increase in black population, 179...
Currier & Ives, Cotton Plantation
Growing Black Population
600% increase in black population, 1790-1860 Less than 700,000 in 1790; 4
million by 1860 1 out of every 3 Southerners –
majority in Mississippi & South Carolina
Mostly due to natural increase - only 50,000 smuggled in after 1808
260,000 free blacks by 1860 (6% of black population) Over 10% of all blacks free by
1810, but many states forbade manumission in 1820s-1830s
Required to carry papers & very limited in rights
Could own slaves – 3,200 did so Many were mulattoes
Population of the Southern States
Blacks in the North
Northern states phased out slavery Penn. (1780), N.Y. (1799), Conn. & N.J. (1804)
provided for gradual abolition – almost all free by 1840
Mass. Supreme Court ruled slavery violated state constitution in 1781
Slavery barred from Northwest Territory (1787)
Over 3/5 of Northern blacks lived in cities Most were unskilled laborers Only 5 states allowed black men to vote
The Rise of King Cotton
Eli Whitney’s cotton ‘gin made it possible to profitably grow short-staple cotton.
Annual production soared: 1790 – 3,000 bales 1810 – 178,000 bales 1860 – 4 million bales
By 1860, South grew 75% of world’s cotton.
Eli Whitney’sCotton ‘Gin
The Cotton Kingdom
Over ½ grown in Ala., Miss. & La. ¾ grown by slaves
1 million slaves moved to new western plantations, 1790-1860 Mostly young adults 60-70% sold Equal sex ratio,
except for sugar plantations
Plantation Profits
Capitalist agriculture 8% annual return on
investment, 1820-60 Demand rose 5% annually
Benefited rest of U.S. Cotton = 60% of U.S.
exports by 1840 South became prime
market for Northern manufactured goods
Hampered economic development of South Few factories No public education
Main Plantation Crops
Slaveowning Concentrated in Wealthy Hands Only 26% of Southern white families owned
slaves by 1860 Majority of slaveowners had 5 or fewer 2.7% owned 50 or more 0.1% owned 200 or more
Average wealth of slaveowners was 13.9 times that of non-slaveowners
Majority of slaves lived on middling or large holdings 25% on small holdings (1-9 slaves) 50% on middling holdings (10-49 slaves) 25% on large holdings (50 or more)
Plantation Life
Supervision varied by size: Resident masters supervised smaller
plantations (under 30 slaves) Hired overseers ran larger ones Foremen (drivers) often slaves
Lenient treatment mixed with harsh punishment Typical rations = 1 peck of cornmeal
& 2.5-4 lb.s of bacon per week; 4 suits of clothing per year
Each family had small wooden cabin, cleaned regularly to protect health
Sundays & Saturday afternoons off
Slave Quarters, Carter’s Grove Plantation, Virginia
Slave Quarters, Carter’s Grove Plantation, Virginia
Life as a Slave Nuclear families with 7
children on average Masters encouraged monogamy
to maintain order most escapees were young,
unmarried men Economic imperatives took
precedence, however 1/3 of all slave marriages broken
up by sale of spouses in Upper South
almost ½ of all children separated from at least 1 parent
Distinction between field slaves & house slaves real, but exaggerated Field slaves (75%) had more
freedom but worse conditions House slaves (25%) had better
conditions but less freedom
Picking cotton
The Paradox of Black - White Relations Dialectical relationship
Each shaped the other Blacks contributed to broader
American culture while creating separate subculture
Whites could never resolve inherent contradictions of slavery Philosophical contradiction:
rests on assumption that one man completely surrenders his will and becomes an extension of another man’s will
Legal contradiction: slaves simultaneously people & property
Plantation near Richmond, VA
Justifications for Slavery
Racism – blacks seen as lazy & childlike Argued slavery civilized &
Christianized them Argued only whipping would make
slaves work Christian Religion
Believed Bible condoned slavery Thought “Curse of Ham” (Gen. 9:20-
27) justified it Feudal Myth
claimed reciprocal relationship – provided for slaves’ needs in exchange for devoted service
Paternalistic care contrasted with “inhumane” treatment of Northern factory workers
Woodcuts fromJosiah Priest,In Defense of Slavery
Blacks’ View of Slavery
Rejected racism, but learned to conform to whites’ expectations to avoid punishment
Saw Christianity as affirming their equality & offering promise of earthly freedom as well as heavenly redemption
Blacks neither grateful for care, nor considered it payment – viewed it as fundamental right Used whites’ rhetoric of feudalism
to demand better treatment Appreciated “good” masters &
accepted punishment when deserved
Slave manacles
Extremely Unfavorable Conditions for Rebellion
High ratio of whites to blacks, unlike rest of the Americas
Small size & dispersed nature of most slaveholdings
Well-armed resident masters who kept close watch on their property
Political stability (except during the Revolutionary & Civil Wars)
Running Away
50,000 slaves ran away each year
75% of escaped slaves were in teens or 20s
Most returned to families or tried to pass as free blacks in cities
Some went “on strike” to negotiate better conditions
UndergroundRailroad map
Effects of Slavery on White Relationships
All whites got benefits of being part of the “master race” Racism used to keep nonslaveholding white
majority in favor of system All white men expected to ride slave patrols
Concept of chivalry defined women as weak & in need of protection from rapacious black men
Women had to endure husbands’ raping of female slaves Women often biggest critics of slavery as a result –
e.g. Sarah & Angelina Grimke