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Chapter 11 Notes

Chapter 11 Notes. National and Regional Growth. On a clean sliced of paper. TITLE : Chapter 11 Notes Subtitle : Early Industry and Inventions Chart Then copy & complete the following chart. Chapter 11 NOTES paper. Subtitle : Effects of the Cotton Gin

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Chapter 11 Notes

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  1. Chapter 11 Notes National and Regional Growth

  2. On a clean sliced of paper • TITLE: Chapter 11 Notes • Subtitle: Early Industry and Inventions Chart • Then copy & complete the following chart.

  3. Chapter 11 NOTES paper • Subtitle: Effects of the Cotton Gin • Then copy & complete the following chart.

  4. Effects of the Cotton Gin

  5. Effects of the Cotton Gin Cotton plantations moved west from the Atlantic coast into Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Planters grew cotton instead of other crops. Slavery remained important as a labor source, and slaves were sold south and west to new cotton plantations. More Native Americans were driven off Southern land.

  6. Chapter 11 NOTES paper • Subtitle: Categorizing Groups – The South • Then copy & complete the following chart.

  7. Categorizing Southern groups

  8. Categorizing Southern groups one-third of South’s population; half worked on large plantations; worked under cruel, backbreaking conditions on plantations; some worked in cities as domestic servants, skilled craftsmen, factory hands, and day laborers; city slaves had more freedom and sometimes kept part of their earnings 8 percent of the South’s black population; many lived in cities; some states barred them or did not allow them to vote or be educated; many employers refused to hire them; faced the threat of being captured and sold into slavery one-third of the South’s White Population owned slaves; most had fewer than 20 slaves; large slaveholders were few in number but were wealthiest and most powerful were majority of white Southerners (2/3); still supported slavery; worked small farms; hoped to buy slaves

  9. On your NOTES paper • briefly describe Nat Turner’s rebellion and its results. • Then draw one conclusion about Southern slavery, based on what you learned about the rebellion.

  10. 1. Summary of rebellion: • Nat Turner and 70 followers killed 55 white people in Virginia. • Afterward, Turner and his men were captured and put to death. • Following the rebellion, white Southerners • killed more than 200 blacks, • passed harsh laws restricting slaves and free blacks, and • suppressed antislavery ideas.

  11. 2. Students might conclude: • that slavery was so terrible that it drove people to rebel even with little chance of success; • That white Southerners would go to extreme lengths to preserve slavery; or • that white Southerners greatly feared enslaved and free blacks.

  12. Chapter 11 NOTES paper • Subtitle: Growth or National Unity? Chart • Then copy & complete the following chart.

  13. protective tariffs encouraged Americans to buy U.S. products instead of European products; national bank with a single currency made trade within the country easier; improved transportation systems reduced costs and strengthened the economy made it easier to travel between cities; increased western settlement and trade; brought the upper Ohio Valley and Great Lakes regions together; helped New York become the nation’s largest city strengthened the federal government by ruling that states could not interfere with federal laws and by stating that only the federal government could regulate interstate commerce agreement with Britain gave the United States new northern territory; agreement with Spain gave Florida to the United States and extended U.S. border to the Pacific Ocean

  14. Chapter 11 NOTES paper • Subtitle: The Missouri Compromise • Then copy & complete the following chart.

  15. The Missouri Compromise wanted to ban slavery in Missouri; wanted to ensure that slave states would NOT outnumber free states wanted to allow slavery in Missouri; wanted to ensure that Congress could NOT ban slavery Missouri was admitted as a slave state, which satisfied the South; Maine was admitted as a free state, which kept the balance of power and satisfied the North; a line was drawn that would allow future free states above it and future slave states below it, which also preserved the balance of power.

  16. The Missouri Compromise

  17. Ch. 11 - Glossary/After you read(pg. 117-118) Terms & Names Part A 1. f 3. c 5. a 2. D 4. e Part B 1. nationalism 2. Sectionalism 3. Industrial Revolution 4. American System 5. interchangeable parts

  18. Main Ideas 1. New England had many rivers to provide water power, ships and access to the ocean, and workers who could not make a living through farming. 2. New farming equipment helped Midwestern farmers feed Northeastern factory workers. Midwestern farmers became a market for the goods manufactured in the Northeast. The textile mills of the Northeast increased the need for Southern cotton.

  19. Main Ideas 3. They disobeyed rules, ran away, and rebelled against slavery. 4. Several Supreme Court decisions strengthened the powers of the national government. 5. It was a warning to European countries not to set up any more colonies in the Americas.

  20. Thinking Critically 1. The Northern economy was based on manufacturing while the Southern economy depended on farming. The North did not depend on slavery for its labor while the cotton plantations of the South did. These economic differences caused political problems in regard to slavery and the spread of slavery to newly-formed states. 2. Answers will vary, but students should support their opinion with reasons. Some students might indicate that the Missouri Compromise was a good decision because it stopped potential trouble. Other students might indicate that the Missouri Compromise did not solve any problems, but merely postponed them.

  21. Chapter 11 Packet(No Cover sheet needed) • HOMEWORK PACKET • /38 VOCABULARY (yours defined – vocab grade is separate) • /20 Ch. 11 Section Worksheets(newsprint – RSG pages 111-118) X / 20 pts (25 possible)- 4 pts if out of order! (-2 pts per item) • DAILY WORK PACKET /20 Chapter 11 Notes • /3 Ch. 11.1 – Early Industry and Inventions chart (1/10) • /3 Notes on Video: America Under Andrew Jackson (1/10) • /3 Ch. 11.2 – Effects of the Cotton Gin (1/11) • /3 Ch. 11. 2 – Categorizing Groups- the South (1/11) • /3 Ch. 11.3 – Growth or National Unity? (1/11) • /3 Ch. 11.3 – Missouri Compromise (1/11) ________ X / 18 pts (23 possible)- 10 pts if out of order! (-2 pts per item)

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