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Impact of Slavery in America: Developments, Resistance, and Rebellions

Explore the growth of slavery, federal support, technological advancements like the cotton gin, transportation innovations, land availability, Louisiana Purchase, Indian removal resistance, and everyday acts of rebellion by enslaved individuals. Learn about theft, flight, and major slave rebellions such as the Stono Rebellion and Nat Turner's Rebellion.

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Impact of Slavery in America: Developments, Resistance, and Rebellions

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  1. Growth of Slavery • Sanction of Federal Government • Technological/Industrial developments • cotton gin • cotton processing • transport (railroads, steamboats) • Availability of land • Louisiana Purchase (Haitian Revolution) • Indian Removal

  2. Resistance • Everyday resistance • slowing work • feigning illness • breaking tools • sabotaging production • Theft • inadequate rations • how could slaves, as property, steal anything the master owned? • Flight • sometimes absconded for a brief time before returning (e.g. to visit family) • runaways usually single men • North as sanctuary(Underground Railroad) • Rebellion • Stono Rebellion (1739) • Gabriel’s Rebellion (1800) • Denmark Vesey’s Rebellion (1822) • Nat Turner’s Rebellion (1831)

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