1 / 9

North and South – Ch 13

North and South – Ch 13. 1820 – 1860 (Reminder – 1800 Industrial Rev began in U.S.). North. South. Tariffs: Support – encourage Americans to buy Amer goods Nat’l Bank: Support – encouraged trade/manufacturing (capital for businesses).

zaria
Télécharger la présentation

North and South – Ch 13

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. North and South – Ch 13 1820 – 1860 (Reminder – 1800 Industrial Rev began in U.S.)

  2. North South • Tariffs: Support – encourage Americans to buy Amer goods • Nat’l Bank: Support – encouraged trade/manufacturing (capital for businesses) • Tariffs: Oppose – trade cotton with Europe and makes goods more expensive • Nat’l Bank: Oppose – prefer state banks.

  3. North South Economy & Technology - Manufacturing/shipping Economy - Long hrs (11 hr days) - Horrible working conditions (no a/c) - Dangerous machinery/many on-job accidents - Water power/steam engines - Unions– organization created by & for workers to improve working conditions Economy & Technology - Agricultural economy – King cotton & slavery - cotton gin – removed seed from cotton - huge increase in amount of cotton processed - need more slaves to process more cotton - North & GB screaming for more cotton to use in factories

  4. North South Transportation: roads/rr/canals developed quickly out of need to tranport goods Communication: telegraph created (type a message) Housing: Urban/cities develop • Slums (no sewage/disease) • Libararies/shopping Transportation: South appears underdeveloped - poor roads, few canals, few rr. - Natural waterways – chief transportation Communication: nothing new Housing: nothing new

  5. Strict Social Class System in South Plantation Owner - only 13% of pop./owned 5 or few slaves/owned large farms Yeomen - largest group/owned small farms/no slaves Tenant farmers - did not own land/worked land for large farm (renters) Rural Poor - subsistence farming – deep in coutryside. Often squatters.

  6. Discrimination North South Slavery had largely disappeared in North by 1820- but discrim. still existed a. Women – low wages/boarding houses b. Child labor c. Immigrant workers Slave Codes = southern laws. (Meant to prevent slave rebellions) a. cannot assemble in large groups b. must have pass to leave master’s property c. crime to teach slaves to read & write

  7. South • Nat Turner – organized slave rebellion. Hung • Underground Railroad – a network of safe-houses owned by free blacks/whites to assist in escaping slavery. • Harriet Tubman (born slave, escaped) referred to as conductor of underground railroad. • Some free African Americans in large cities (created their own communities). • 1859 Arkansas – ordered all free African Americans out of the state

  8. Discrimination against Immigrant workers – in North Irish Germans – largest group of immigrants - Moved to US because of potato famine (extreme shortage of food – 1 mil. died) - very poor, worked in factories for low wages/servants • 2nd largest group of immigrants • moved to US due to failure of democracy & opportunity - enough money to buy farms & businesses.

  9. Nativists = Americans who thought they were real (“native”) Americans. Nativists fear immigrants will: • Take American jobs (lower wages) • Bring diseases • Different cultures/religions BEFORE 1830/40’s – most immigrants were protestants (from GB) or slaves (from Africa) After 1840’s – Most immigrants Irish (Catholic), some German (Catholic) Immigrants brought new languages, customs, and religions to US.

More Related