Kayla Gildore Mrs. Hollowell APUSH 3 8 December 2016 Ch 16 essential questions Questions Notes Cotton-based society and economy The South was a cotton-based society. Many plantations were located in the South and cotton was their most common cash crop. This cash crop made their society also a cotton-based economy.…
Slavery was an issue in slave states from South and Free states North in 1800s. South states were the agricultural area so they needed slaves and support it, but not the North state. Several disputes exists, Congress performed compromises to settle these disputes. But these compromises could not hold for longer. (1820 - 1861: HOLDING THE UNION TOGETHER)…
Chapter 11: The South and Slavery, 1800-1600 1. Explain the various factors that made the South distinct from the rest of the United States during the early nineteenth century. The South continued to remain an area known for being rural and focusing on agricultural within the first half of the nineteenth century and the rest of the world focusing on the urban industrial development. As the South’s climate was warm and humid, this became great for the commercial crops that were profitable, such as tobacco, cotton, indigo, and sugar cranes.…
Between 1800 and 1860, economic, social, and political factors contributed to the development of sectional differences between the North and the South. These differences included how best to expand the United States economy, the extension of slavery into the territories, and the relationship between the states and the federal government. These differences laid the groundwork for the Civil War. The North and South followed different paths, developing into two distinct and very different regions. The North economy is mostly relied on manufacturing and industrialization and the South economy is mostly relied on plantation and cotton.…
When it comes to the economy, the North and the South were extremely different. For example, the North had more factories, unlike the South, which relied on farming. The immense amount of railroads in the North, 13,000 more than the South to be exact, made deliveries to factories much easier (Doc. 2). Since the South relied on farming, slavery was more common down in the South. Around 1861, there was an estimated…
The north and southern states had different ideas about slavery, the north didn't want slavery and the south wanted slavery. With that argument, and with Abraham Lincoln won in 1860, the north and south were more tense than ever, whether the north wanted to end slavery in the south or when the south would try to stop them. But not just slavery was the cause of the north and south spliting, it had states rights and sectionalism. The states rights were making the north angry knowing that it was legal for slavery in all states.…
While the South’s increasing need for slaves to work the cotton fields, the North had a growing production of iron and steel and the increase of factories. The major technological advances made a huge gap between the two societies. This was one of the major growing contradictions the South and North. At the time these were two very different societies that had different beliefs, religion, and reasoning. Of course there were several events that affected the start of the Civil war such as the…
Sectionalism is the division of the Northern and Southern political beliefs in the United States. One of the main differences between the North and the South was their opinions on slavery. The North was completely industrialized; factories were being built and because of the massive immigrant population slaves were not needed, nor benefited the Northern economy. In the South, the economy was made up of an agricultural society. The North prospered as an industrialized economy because of the development and the invention of new transportation such as the railroad system and canals.…
The states of the North had become anti-slavery and the states of the South became slavery supporters. This is a relation to sectionalism in the 1800s because as time went by, the North and the South began to encounter issues, such as losing supporters with the same views of slavery. As the issues became more violent, the separation of the two Cardinal…
As a result of the cash crops found throughout the southern region, big plantations were spread all over the region. It was a region that had very little to no social movement for those newcomers whose ancestors didn’t set them up as one of the top classes. The south was very agriculturally orientated. Their plantation growth and need for free labor that weren’t indentured servants because of Bacon’s rebellion, which was a rebellion of free indentured servants who had nowhere to go, increased. Causing these aristocracies to become known as slaveocracy.…
John Brown devised a plan to incite a slave rebellion in the Appalachian Mountains, arming slaves as they were freed and pushing on to free more men, the army of former slaves growing drastically as it rolled along (Stoddard and Murphy, 15). Slave rebellions had failed miserably in the past, but Brown's idea of properly arming the slaves gave some abolitionists the idea that it could work. On October 16, 1859, John Brown led a group of twenty-two men into Harper's Ferry, West Virginia, to secure weapons from the federal armory stationed in the small town nestled between the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers (Stoddard and Murphy, 15). The weapons stored in the armory would be more than enough to kick off Brown's envisioned revolution. Events did not unfold as the men had hoped, and they were soon surrounded by townspeople and fired upon, with marines (led, ironically, by then Colonel Robert E. Lee) arriving by the following afternoon (Stoddard and Murphy, 15).…
Comparison of the New England and Southern Colonies The colonies were first developed in the 1600’s, however the New England colonies and Southern Colonies were very different despite them both having similar reasons for coming to the new world. The southern colonies, consisting of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, and Georgia, were centered on making money and agriculture, whereas the New England colonies, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, were centered on religious freedom from the Church of England. What makes them similar is that they both came to America to start a new life with hopes of being prosperous and healthy. Southern Colonies…
Teresa Nguyen Mrs. Pante and Mr. McWaters 10th Grade Honors English and History 18 November 2016 Comparison of the Colonial Regions Before there was America, it was just thirteen colonies divided into three regions under the control of the British government, known as the New England Colonies, the Middle Colonies, and the Southern Colonies. People came to the new colonies to create a new society and economy. Each region had their own lifestyle.…
The North kept receiving slaves that escaped from the South, which angered the South even further. Southerners were not pleased that the northerners were not accepting their views, which gave the South more reason to start a…
When comparing the North and South, there aren’t many similarities. Both believed the exact opposite on many different topics. These include topics of economics, social, military, and political ideas. At the end of the Civil War, the rural South and urban North were able to come together as a single and strong nation.…