
North and South Part 3
Presentation
•
History
•
8th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Medium
Edward Etten
Used 33+ times
FREE Resource
7 Slides • 12 Questions
1
North and South
Southern Cotton Kingdom
2
Rise of the Cotton Kingdom
HOW WERE THE ECONOMIES OF THE SOUTH AND NORTH DIFFERENT?
• In the early years of the United States, the South had an economy based
almost entirely on farming, despite the fact that settlers had developed
only a small part of the region.
• Most Southerners lived in the Upper South, an area along the Atlantic coast in
Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina.
• A few people had also settled in Georgia and South Carolina.
• By 1850, the South had changed.
• Its population had spread inland to the Deep South.
• This region included Georgia and South Carolina, as well as Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana, and Texas.
• The economy of the South was thriving.
• The economy depended, however, on slavery.
• Slavery grew stronger than ever in the South, while it all but disappeared in the North.
3
Multiple Choice
In the early years of the United States, what was the South's economy almost entirely based on?
Shipping
Industry
Trading
Farming
4
Multiple Select
What were the THREE main areas that made up the Upper South?
Maryland
Virginia
North Carolina
Delaware
5
Rise of the Cotton Kingdom
• Cotton Is King
• Southern planters grew mainly rice, indigo, and tobacco in colonial times.
• After the American Revolution, demand for these crops decreased, while European
mills not wanted Southern cotton.
• Raising a cotton crop took a large amount of time and labor.
• After the harvest, workers had to carefully separate the plant’s sticky seeds from the
cotton fibers.
• Eli Whitney solved this problem with his invention of the cotton gin in 1793.
• Whitney’s gin quickly and easily removed seeds from the cotton fibers.
• With a cotton gin, productivity, which is a measure of how much a worker can produce with
a given amount of time and effort, shot up.
•The cotton gin helped workers process 50 times more cotton each day than they could by hand.
• The use of the cotton gin had important consequences.
• It encouraged farmers to grow more cotton in more places.
• Because Southern planters relied on enslaved workers to plant and pick their cotton, the
demand for slave labor increased.
• By 1860, the Deep South and Upper South remained agricultural, but each
region concentrated on different crops.
• The Upper South: Grew tobacco, hemp, wheat, and vegetables.
• The Deep South: Grew cotton, rice, and sugarcane.
6
Multiple Select
What THREE things did southern planters grow in colonial times?
Rice
Cotton
Indigo
Tobacco
7
Multiple Choice
What is the measure of how much a worker can produce within a given time called?
Productivity
Mass Production
Labor Laws
Production Value
8
Rise of the Cotton Kingdom
• Cotton Is King cont.
• Because more workers were needed to produce cotton and sugar, the sale of
enslaved Africans became a big business.
• The Upper South became a center for the sale and transport of enslaved people.
• This trade became known as the domestic slave trade, which is the trade of enslaved
people among the different states in the United States.
9
Multiple Choice
Where was the center for the sale and transport of enslaved people?
Lower South
Lower North
Upper South
Upper North
10
Multiple Choice
What is the trade of enslaved people among the different states of the United States called?
Optional Slavery
Permanent Slave Trade
Domestic Slave Trade
Domical Dominion
11
Southern Industry
WHY DID INDUSTRY DEVELOP SLOWLY IN THE SOUTH?
• Industry developed more slowly in the South than in the North.
• One reason was the boom in cotton.
• Agriculture, especially cotton farming, produced great profits.
• Due to the costs of building a new industry, Planters would have had to sell enslaved people
or land to raise the money to build factories
•They chose to invest in profitable agriculture, which included enslaved Africans.
• This process took a lot of time to set, resulting in a delay in their profits.
• Second reason was the market for manufactures goods in the South was small.
• Enslaved people, who made up a large share of the population, had no money to buy
goods.
• Because of this, it discouraged industries from developing there.
• For these reasons, many Southerners did not want industry.
12
Multiple Select
What were the TWO reasons that industry developed slower in the South?
The Boom in Cotton
Lack of Waterways
No Railroads in the South
The Market For Manufactured Goods In The South Was Small
13
Multiple Choice
Who made up a large share of the population?
Tenant Farmers
Yeomen
Enslaved People
Plantation Owners
14
Southern Industry
• Factories in the South
• Some Southern leaders wanted to develop industry in the region.
• They thought that the South depended too much on the North for manufactured
goods.
• The leaders argued that factories would improve the economy in the Upper South.
• William Gregg, of South Carolina, shared this view.
• He opened his own textile factory.
• Augustin Clayton, of Georgia, also went into textiles by opening a cotton mill.
• Joseph Reid Anderson, of Virginia, made Tredegar Iron Works, which was one
of the nation’s leading iron producers.
• The Alabama Iron Works also included a sawmill for producing lumber.
• These industries, however, were not typical in the South.
15
Multiple Choice
What kind of business did William Gregg open?
Steel Factory
Textile Factory
Cotton Mill
Department Store
16
Multiple Choice
What was one of the leading iron makers in the nation?
Walthill Iron Works
Tennessee Iron Works
Ohio Iron Works
Tredegar Iron Works
17
Southern Industry
• Southern Transportation
• In general, farmers and the few manufacturers of the South relied on natural
waterways to transport their goods.
• Most towns were located on coasts or along rivers because canals were scarce and
roads were poor.
• Southern rail lines were short, local, and not linked together.
• The South had fewer railroads than the North.
• This caused Southern cities to grow more slowly than Northern cities, where railways were
major routes of commerce and settlements.
• The rail networks in the North also gave Northern manufacturers an advantage over
their Southern competitors.
• Lower shipping costs allowed Northerners to charge less for their goods.
• By 1860, only about 1/3rdof the nation’s rail lines lay within the South.
• This rail shortage would hurt the South in the years to come.
18
Multiple Select
What TWO things were the Southern rail lines like?
Long
Short
Old
Local
19
Multiple Select
In what TWO areas were most towns located?
Coasts
Farmlands
Along Rivers
Around Colleges
North and South
Southern Cotton Kingdom
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