1 / 13

Chapter 7

Chapter 7. The Democratic Republic, 1790-1820. Web. Life in Post-Revolutionary America. Overwhelmingly a nation of farmer householders in 1789 First goal was to provide sustenance for families Second was attaining “competence”

sheera
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 The Democratic Republic, 1790-1820 Web

  2. Life in Post-Revolutionary America • Overwhelmingly a nation of farmer householders in 1789 • First goal was to provide sustenance for families • Second was attaining “competence” • Living up to community standards and protecting long-term independence of their households • Most farmers produced a variety of crops and animals • Increase in foreign demand for American food, 1789-1815, helped to solidify sex segregation in farm work • Men increasingly worked fields • Women managed the household • Some farm families took in outwork to supplement their incomes

  3. Life in Post-Revolutionary America (cont.) • Reinforced patriarchal familial structures • Interdependence between farm families very common • Barter rather than cash transactions • “Changing system” adopted in South and West • Changes in inheritance system • Land left to all sons with cooperation among them expected • Farm tenancy rose as land acquisition became more difficult’ • Standards of living varied

  4. Life in Post-Revolutionary American (cont.) • Poor families lived simple lives • Couldn’t afford to paint their houses or landscape • Animals foraged near houses • Little furniture • Common bowl at meal times and communal sleeping arrangements • Richer families had more amenities • Ability to light their homes at night • Upholstered furniture • Larger homes with more privacy

  5. Continued Westward Expansion after the Revolution • Indians in possession of almost all land granted to the United States in the Treaty of Paris • Pressure on woodlands Indians to surrender or evacuate was immense • Battle of Fallen Timbers, 1794, secured much of Ohio and southeastern Indiana • Remaining Indians fell to squabbling among themselves • Indians decimated by disease, effects of alcohol • Alexander McGillivray tried unsuccessfully to unite Creeks between 1783 and 1793

  6. Continued Westward Expansion after the Revolution(cont.) • Temskwatana and his brother Tecumseh (Shawnees) sought to unite the northwest Indians in 1805 • Defeated in battle at Tippecanoe in 1811 • Easterners looked down on backcountry settlers • Adopted Indian farming techniques and lived rustic lives • Backcountry farmers voiced two demands after 1789 • Federal protection from the Indians • Guarantee of right to navigate Ohio and Mississippi Rivers • Frontier settled and integrated into Union by 1803

  7. Postwar Life in the Plantation South • Economic diversification to grain and livestock farming forced some planters in the Chesapeake to manumit their slaves • Manumission especially common in Delaware and Maryland • Much less common in Virginia • Cotton cultivation in Deep South gave slavery a new life • Invention of cotton gin in 1793 made profitable, large-scale production possible • Cotton planters purchased surplus slaves from the Chesapeake • Coastal South also made recommitment to slavery • Rice plantations in South Carolina and Georgia • Developed task system for slave supervision

  8. ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Distribution of Slave Population, 1790-1820

  9. Life in Urban America after 1790 • The nation’s five largest cities in 1790 were all seaport cities • Became centers for internal and international travel before and during the Revolution • Prosperity furthered during European wars from 1793 to 1815 • Merchants amassed large fortunes • New institutions created to support manufacturing and commerce • Masses of poverty remained in seaport cities • Demonstrated undemocratic distribution of wealth in society • Erosion of position of skilled artisans • Increasing reliance on unskilled “slop” workers • Undercut patriarchal status of fathers and husbands

  10. Post-Revolutionary Challenges to established Authority • Decline of patriarchal authority affected many aspects of everyday life • Affected courtship and marriage patterns as young people increasingly made choices based on affection and personal attraction • Rise in number of pregnancies out of marriage • Dramatic increase in alcohol consumption • Whiskey became the national drink during the fifty years after the Revolution

  11. Post-Revolutionary Challenges to established authority(cont.) • Getting drunk became an outright goal • Explosive growth in availability of reading material • Novels, read mostly by women • Proliferation of newspapers • Spread of silent reading as activity for the masses • Redefinition of citizenship • Increasing calls for equal rights for all white men • Calls for political rights for property/less men • Especially excluded women and African Americans

  12. Religion in the Early Republic • Established churches in decline • New democratic sects grew in popularity • Renounced need for an educated, formally authorized clergy • Emphasized emotionalism and storytelling over doctrine and ritual • Spread of evangelical Protestantism in the South • Camp meeting used to win new converts • At its heart, a conservative acceptance of the established social hierarchy • Accommodated themselves to slavery

  13. Religion in the Early Republic (cont.) • Christianity began to spread among African Americans • Thousands of slaves embraced Christianity between 178- and 1820 • Revivalists welcomed both slaves and free blacks • Churches internally segregated • Some African-American communities formed their own churches • Gave rise to thoughts among some slaves of seeking freedom • Hoped to foment a republican revolution in Virginia • Crushed brutally and completely Web

More Related