Deck 13: The Old South 1820-1860

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Question
The chapter introduction tells the stories of several southerners-Colonel Daniel Jordan; a nameless Texan; Sam Williams and his wife Nancy; Octave Johnson; and Ferdinand Steel-to make the point that

A) the antebellum South was marked by great diversity, but at its core it was unified by its slave-based agricultural economy.
B) the antebellum South had the reputation for being unified in its views of slavery, but actually only a few in the South actively supported the slave-based agricultural economy.
C) the South was unique among the sections of the U.S. because of racist attitudes and the speculative approach to farming that characterized all classes of its citizens.
D) the South was not much different from other sections, except that the income of the majority of southerners came from slave-grown cotton, while elsewhere the majority of Americans grew corn or wheat with their own labor.
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Question
Which of these is a distinctive feature of the southern agricultural system?

A) Crops like cotton, rice, and sugar could be grown only in the South, which also wore out the soil and damaged the environment.
B) Its dependence on staple crops caused great economic displacement for Northern businesses.
C) Its rural agricultural economy was more stable but less profitable than the boom-and-bust cycles of the industrializing North.
D) Its rural agricultural economy was not based on the institution of slavery.
Question
Where was the black belt region of the South?

A) in central Alabama, in the heart of the deep South, where the rich soil was ideal for cotton
B) in the Tennessee River valley, where devastating flooding was frequent
C) along the Gulf Coast, where the slave population was concentrated
D) in an arc from South Carolina to Mississippi, where in most counties blacks outnumbered whites
Question
"Cotton was king in the Old South."Which of the following statements about cotton is true?

A) It was grown primarily in the Upper South.
B) It was grown only by the larger slaveowners.
C) Cultivation migrated gradually westward to new agricultural frontiers.
D) By 1860 the United States produced almost half of the world's cotton supply.
Question
Which of the following crops were grown extensively in the Upper South?

A) cotton
B) rice
C) wheat
D) sugar
Question
Which of the following is NOT evidence of the South's economic underdevelopment?

A) The preoccupation with cotton hindered economic diversification (such as developing internal markets or manufacturing enterprises).
B) The South remained a region vulnerable to market fluctuations and beset by cultural backwardness (e.g., lack of public education).
C) The South remained overwhelmingly rural.
D) The southern economy in general, and white per capita income in particular, lagged behind that of the free states.
Question
Which of the following was true about slavery as a labor system?

A) A slave owner could typically expect about a 60 percent profit on a slave's annual labor..
B) As slavery spread into the Deep South, wealth and power became more equally shared among the various classes of white southerners.
C) It was slavery that made possible the South's "mass production" of industrial products for export.
D) Most southerners owned slaves.
Question
What was true about slavery as a labor system?

A) As the institution spread throughout the Deep South, a majority of white families came to own slaves.
B) By the 1850s, the United States was the only remaining slaveholding society in the Americas.
C) The gang and task systems were two methods of organizing a slaves' work.
D) The most arduous toil was done by field hands, who were all male.
Question
Why was the typical southern plantation less than 1,000 acres of land?

A) a cultural standard
B) land was typically divided into 640 acre lots
C) to avoid excessive property taxes
D) to limit time lost walking to the furthest fields
Question
Manufacturing lagged in the South because

A) whites believed slaves could not do industrial work.
B) slaveowners lacked capital to invest in manufacturing.
C) high profits from agriculture discouraged other possible investments.
D) the South lacked a suitable white workforce, since immigrants settled in the North.
Question
The slave population

A) was concentrated in the Deep South.
B) moved steadily south and east.
C) was concentrated in the East.
D) was concentrated west of the Mississippi River.
Question
The slave population concentrated in all of the following places EXCEPT

A) the Deep South.
B) the Upper South.
C) in areas of fertile soil and relatively flat terrain.
D) in areas accessible to transportation.
Question
Slaveowners made up ________ of the southern white population, but the true "planters of consequence"with at least 50 slaves ________.

A) the great majority; were found only in the older Tidewater region
B) about half; dominated politics
C) roughly a quarter; made up less than 1 percent of the total white population
D) a small minority; constituted a majority of those slaveholders
Question
The Tidewater planter ________, while the planter of the Deep South ________.

A) raised primarily rice; raised primarily cotton
B) aspired to the ideal of the English country gentleman; was an entrepreneur bound on making a fortune
C) dealt brutally with his slaves; tended to treat slaves more humanely
D) defended slavery as a positive good; was often troubled by the immorality of the slave system
Question
The upper-class plantation mistress

A) accepted a sexual code that kept white women pure but tolerated sexual relations between white men and slave women.
B) lived a life of leisure centered around artistic and literary pursuits.
C) enjoyed the unique luxury of criticizing her own role in society as well as the slave system in general.
D) faced an unexpected variety of burdensome managerial and service duties.
Question
Yeoman farmers in the South

A) owned only a few slaves.
B) hated the planter class.
C) opposed slavery because it hurt them economically.
D) suffered from isolation, a limited market, and chronic money shortage.
Question
In terms of sheer numbers, which of the following groups made up the backbone of southern society?

A) the planters of consequence
B) whites who owned only a few slaves
C) whites who owned between 20 and 50 slaves
D) yeoman farmers who owned no slaves
Question
The gang and task systems

A) were used alternately in the spring and fall.
B) were the two typical ways of organizing slave labor.
C) were used for rice and sugar production, but not cotton.
D) required constant supervision of the slaves.
Question
The slave's diet

A) led to malnutrition because of insufficient calorie intake.
B) was one of several reasons why life expectancy for slaves was lower than for whites.
C) was one of several reasons for a rate of population increase lower than that of whites.
D) would be obtained mostly from slave gardens, hunting, and stealing.
Question
In the 1830s, reacting to Nat Turner's rebellion and the growing abolitionist movement, southern slaveholders developed the argument that slavery was a positive good. Which of the following assertions was NOT part of their proslavery argument?

A) Slavery was a beneficial status for blacks, as they required white guardianship.
B) Slavery was sanctioned by the Bible and history.
C) Slavery was more consistent with the humanitarian spirit of the age than the northern wage labor system.
D) Slavery's opponents could build no persuasive argument against it.
Question
Nat Turner

A) became a leading advocate of slavery as a "positive good."
B) strongly defended humane treatment of slaves as the slave owners' paternalistic obligation.
C) led a slave revolt despite enjoying relatively humane treatment by his master.
D) was an escaped slave who returned to the South to lead other runaways to freedom.
Question
Which of the following is NOT true of Nat Turner's revolt?

A) Turner rebelled due to extreme mistreatment by a series of harsh Louisiana masters.
B) It was small and spontaneous, in contrast to earlier noteworthy slave uprisings.
C) All participants in it, including Turner, were eventually captured and executed.
D) It prompted a debate in the Virginia legislature on the merits of slavery.
Question
The most common form of slave resistance was

A) theft.
B) refusal to work.
C) escape.
D) rebellion.
Question
The slave family

A) had to be sold as a unit, according to laws in the Upper South.
B) usually consisted of the nuclear unit (father, mother, and their children), but often was part of larger kinship networks.
C) rarely existed in a functional way on large plantations.
D) was essentially impossible to sustain under the conditions of bondage.
Question
What is true of slave religion?

A) It was expressed in secret meetings beyond white supervision.
B) It was not central to the culture of most slave communities.
C) It featured songs with voodoo applications.
D) It remained largely unaffected by Christianity until the 1860s.
Question
Free blacks in the South

A) developed an internal hierarchy favoring darker or "more African" skin color.
B) lived mostly in urban centers.
C) lived mostly in the Upper South.
D) were primarily mulattoes.
Question
While the Old South was a diverse region of the United States, it was united in

A) that most white southerners believed slavery to be on the decline by the 1830s.
B) its dependence on staple crops such as tobacco, cotton, and rice.
C) its dependence on the labor of women.
D) that slavery was central only to the South's economy and not to its culture and identity.
Question
After 1830, southerners defended slavery more aggressively due to

A) a perceived decline in southern influence in national politics.
B) the rise of the abolitionist movement in the North.
C) the increasing dependence of the southern economy on slave-grown staples.
D) the American Revolt.
Question
The Virginia debate of 1832

A) led to a resolution declaring slavery as a positive good.
B) caused the legislature to condemn slavery but adopt no program to deal with it.
C) led to the adoption of a program of gradual emancipation.
D) was the last significant attempt by white southerners to take action against slavery.
Question
The proslavery argument

A) was fully developed before 1830 as part of the anti-tariff campaign.
B) refused to consider the Bible, depending instead on racist scientific treatises.
C) was successful in influencing northern public opinion on slavery.
D) was developed primarily to satisfy the consciences of southerners.
Question
Which of the following was NOT an element of the proslavery argument developed in the 1830s?

A) None of the Biblical prophets or Christ himself had ever condemned slavery.
B) Slavery was an unfortunate legacy of earlier tyrannical acts of the English Parliament and northern colonial merchants.
C) Southern slaves lived better lives than northern factory workers.
D) Slaves belonged to an inferior race.
Question
What group was vehemently opposed to ending slavery even though they sometimes traded with slaves and keenly resented planters?

A) poor whites
B) yeoman farmers
C) drivers
D) overseers
Question
In North America, slave revolts were ________; in Latin American slave societies, full-scale revolts were ________.

A) common; extremely rare
B) very rare; nearly nonexistent
C) extremely rare; common and involved large numbers of slaves
D) numerous but small; nearly impossible to organize
Question
The major source of southern wealth and the major stimulus to national economic growth was ________.
Question
The backbone of southern society, accounting for more than half the southern population and typically owning no slaves, was ________ farm families.
Question
Within the slave community, the ________ and the drivers, who supervised the field hands, enjoyed the highest status.
Question
In the organization of slave labor, under the ________ system a specific assignment was given to each slave, with the incentive that the workday was over when it was completed.
Question
The traditional head of the slave family was the ________.
Question
The most common form of slave resistance was ________.
Question
Particularly disturbing to southerners was the 1831 revolt led by the slave ________.
Question
The politics of slavery in the South meant that southern candidates had to be careful to avoid being seen as ________.
Question
A major difference between slavery in North America and Latin America is that in Latin America, ________ were much more frequent.
Question
Give three major differences between society and life on the cotton frontier and in the Tidewater region. What was the significance of these differences?
Question
Describe the class structure of the Old South. What was the relationship of slavery to this class structure?
Question
What pressures did slavery place on plantation mistresses?
Question
What united slaves in the Old South? Were there significant divisions among slaves?
Question
What role did religion play in the lives of slaves? How did that role differ from the role of religion encouraged by many white masters?
Question
Describe the change in attitudes toward slavery in the South before and after the early 1830s. What events contributed to that change?
Question
Compare and contrast slave revolts in North America and Latin America.
Question
The chapter introduction profiles several southerners: Colonel Daniel Jordan, a plantation master in South Carolina; a planter from the Red River country of Texas; Sam Williams, a skilled ironworker slave from Virginia, and his wife Nancy; Octave Johnson, a slave in Louisiana; and Ferdinand Steel, a farmer in Mississippi. Using what you have learned from the text about the class structure of the Old South, to which class does each of these people belong? Explain how each class differs from the others.
Question
What were the major geographical regions of the Old South? Explain how the geography of the South was a force of both unity and division.
Question
How did the conditions of slavery make it especially difficult for slaves to establish their own culture? How did slave communities work to overcome this?
Question
Consider this statement: "Some [southern plantation] women drew a parallel between their situation and that of the slaves."What parallels could plantation mistresses draw? Where do the parallels break down? Do you agree with the mistresses' observations?
Question
Do you believe slavery was the most important factor in shaping southern society? If so, explain why, especially since only one-third of southerners were African American and only one-quarter of southern whites owned slaves or were members of slave-owning families. If you do not believe slavery was the most important factor shaping southern society, what factor was more important?
Question
Give three major differences between the North and the South in this period. What was the significance of each of these differences? Which one do you think was the most important and why?
Question
Explain why the South's dependence on exports made it difficult for an internally diversified economy to develop. How did this dependence retard southern economic development?
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Deck 13: The Old South 1820-1860
1
The chapter introduction tells the stories of several southerners-Colonel Daniel Jordan; a nameless Texan; Sam Williams and his wife Nancy; Octave Johnson; and Ferdinand Steel-to make the point that

A) the antebellum South was marked by great diversity, but at its core it was unified by its slave-based agricultural economy.
B) the antebellum South had the reputation for being unified in its views of slavery, but actually only a few in the South actively supported the slave-based agricultural economy.
C) the South was unique among the sections of the U.S. because of racist attitudes and the speculative approach to farming that characterized all classes of its citizens.
D) the South was not much different from other sections, except that the income of the majority of southerners came from slave-grown cotton, while elsewhere the majority of Americans grew corn or wheat with their own labor.
the antebellum South was marked by great diversity, but at its core it was unified by its slave-based agricultural economy.
2
Which of these is a distinctive feature of the southern agricultural system?

A) Crops like cotton, rice, and sugar could be grown only in the South, which also wore out the soil and damaged the environment.
B) Its dependence on staple crops caused great economic displacement for Northern businesses.
C) Its rural agricultural economy was more stable but less profitable than the boom-and-bust cycles of the industrializing North.
D) Its rural agricultural economy was not based on the institution of slavery.
Crops like cotton, rice, and sugar could be grown only in the South, which also wore out the soil and damaged the environment.
3
Where was the black belt region of the South?

A) in central Alabama, in the heart of the deep South, where the rich soil was ideal for cotton
B) in the Tennessee River valley, where devastating flooding was frequent
C) along the Gulf Coast, where the slave population was concentrated
D) in an arc from South Carolina to Mississippi, where in most counties blacks outnumbered whites
in central Alabama, in the heart of the deep South, where the rich soil was ideal for cotton
4
"Cotton was king in the Old South."Which of the following statements about cotton is true?

A) It was grown primarily in the Upper South.
B) It was grown only by the larger slaveowners.
C) Cultivation migrated gradually westward to new agricultural frontiers.
D) By 1860 the United States produced almost half of the world's cotton supply.
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5
Which of the following crops were grown extensively in the Upper South?

A) cotton
B) rice
C) wheat
D) sugar
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6
Which of the following is NOT evidence of the South's economic underdevelopment?

A) The preoccupation with cotton hindered economic diversification (such as developing internal markets or manufacturing enterprises).
B) The South remained a region vulnerable to market fluctuations and beset by cultural backwardness (e.g., lack of public education).
C) The South remained overwhelmingly rural.
D) The southern economy in general, and white per capita income in particular, lagged behind that of the free states.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
7
Which of the following was true about slavery as a labor system?

A) A slave owner could typically expect about a 60 percent profit on a slave's annual labor..
B) As slavery spread into the Deep South, wealth and power became more equally shared among the various classes of white southerners.
C) It was slavery that made possible the South's "mass production" of industrial products for export.
D) Most southerners owned slaves.
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k this deck
8
What was true about slavery as a labor system?

A) As the institution spread throughout the Deep South, a majority of white families came to own slaves.
B) By the 1850s, the United States was the only remaining slaveholding society in the Americas.
C) The gang and task systems were two methods of organizing a slaves' work.
D) The most arduous toil was done by field hands, who were all male.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Why was the typical southern plantation less than 1,000 acres of land?

A) a cultural standard
B) land was typically divided into 640 acre lots
C) to avoid excessive property taxes
D) to limit time lost walking to the furthest fields
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Manufacturing lagged in the South because

A) whites believed slaves could not do industrial work.
B) slaveowners lacked capital to invest in manufacturing.
C) high profits from agriculture discouraged other possible investments.
D) the South lacked a suitable white workforce, since immigrants settled in the North.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The slave population

A) was concentrated in the Deep South.
B) moved steadily south and east.
C) was concentrated in the East.
D) was concentrated west of the Mississippi River.
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12
The slave population concentrated in all of the following places EXCEPT

A) the Deep South.
B) the Upper South.
C) in areas of fertile soil and relatively flat terrain.
D) in areas accessible to transportation.
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k this deck
13
Slaveowners made up ________ of the southern white population, but the true "planters of consequence"with at least 50 slaves ________.

A) the great majority; were found only in the older Tidewater region
B) about half; dominated politics
C) roughly a quarter; made up less than 1 percent of the total white population
D) a small minority; constituted a majority of those slaveholders
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14
The Tidewater planter ________, while the planter of the Deep South ________.

A) raised primarily rice; raised primarily cotton
B) aspired to the ideal of the English country gentleman; was an entrepreneur bound on making a fortune
C) dealt brutally with his slaves; tended to treat slaves more humanely
D) defended slavery as a positive good; was often troubled by the immorality of the slave system
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k this deck
15
The upper-class plantation mistress

A) accepted a sexual code that kept white women pure but tolerated sexual relations between white men and slave women.
B) lived a life of leisure centered around artistic and literary pursuits.
C) enjoyed the unique luxury of criticizing her own role in society as well as the slave system in general.
D) faced an unexpected variety of burdensome managerial and service duties.
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k this deck
16
Yeoman farmers in the South

A) owned only a few slaves.
B) hated the planter class.
C) opposed slavery because it hurt them economically.
D) suffered from isolation, a limited market, and chronic money shortage.
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k this deck
17
In terms of sheer numbers, which of the following groups made up the backbone of southern society?

A) the planters of consequence
B) whites who owned only a few slaves
C) whites who owned between 20 and 50 slaves
D) yeoman farmers who owned no slaves
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The gang and task systems

A) were used alternately in the spring and fall.
B) were the two typical ways of organizing slave labor.
C) were used for rice and sugar production, but not cotton.
D) required constant supervision of the slaves.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The slave's diet

A) led to malnutrition because of insufficient calorie intake.
B) was one of several reasons why life expectancy for slaves was lower than for whites.
C) was one of several reasons for a rate of population increase lower than that of whites.
D) would be obtained mostly from slave gardens, hunting, and stealing.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In the 1830s, reacting to Nat Turner's rebellion and the growing abolitionist movement, southern slaveholders developed the argument that slavery was a positive good. Which of the following assertions was NOT part of their proslavery argument?

A) Slavery was a beneficial status for blacks, as they required white guardianship.
B) Slavery was sanctioned by the Bible and history.
C) Slavery was more consistent with the humanitarian spirit of the age than the northern wage labor system.
D) Slavery's opponents could build no persuasive argument against it.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Nat Turner

A) became a leading advocate of slavery as a "positive good."
B) strongly defended humane treatment of slaves as the slave owners' paternalistic obligation.
C) led a slave revolt despite enjoying relatively humane treatment by his master.
D) was an escaped slave who returned to the South to lead other runaways to freedom.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which of the following is NOT true of Nat Turner's revolt?

A) Turner rebelled due to extreme mistreatment by a series of harsh Louisiana masters.
B) It was small and spontaneous, in contrast to earlier noteworthy slave uprisings.
C) All participants in it, including Turner, were eventually captured and executed.
D) It prompted a debate in the Virginia legislature on the merits of slavery.
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k this deck
23
The most common form of slave resistance was

A) theft.
B) refusal to work.
C) escape.
D) rebellion.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The slave family

A) had to be sold as a unit, according to laws in the Upper South.
B) usually consisted of the nuclear unit (father, mother, and their children), but often was part of larger kinship networks.
C) rarely existed in a functional way on large plantations.
D) was essentially impossible to sustain under the conditions of bondage.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What is true of slave religion?

A) It was expressed in secret meetings beyond white supervision.
B) It was not central to the culture of most slave communities.
C) It featured songs with voodoo applications.
D) It remained largely unaffected by Christianity until the 1860s.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Free blacks in the South

A) developed an internal hierarchy favoring darker or "more African" skin color.
B) lived mostly in urban centers.
C) lived mostly in the Upper South.
D) were primarily mulattoes.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
While the Old South was a diverse region of the United States, it was united in

A) that most white southerners believed slavery to be on the decline by the 1830s.
B) its dependence on staple crops such as tobacco, cotton, and rice.
C) its dependence on the labor of women.
D) that slavery was central only to the South's economy and not to its culture and identity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
After 1830, southerners defended slavery more aggressively due to

A) a perceived decline in southern influence in national politics.
B) the rise of the abolitionist movement in the North.
C) the increasing dependence of the southern economy on slave-grown staples.
D) the American Revolt.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The Virginia debate of 1832

A) led to a resolution declaring slavery as a positive good.
B) caused the legislature to condemn slavery but adopt no program to deal with it.
C) led to the adoption of a program of gradual emancipation.
D) was the last significant attempt by white southerners to take action against slavery.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The proslavery argument

A) was fully developed before 1830 as part of the anti-tariff campaign.
B) refused to consider the Bible, depending instead on racist scientific treatises.
C) was successful in influencing northern public opinion on slavery.
D) was developed primarily to satisfy the consciences of southerners.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which of the following was NOT an element of the proslavery argument developed in the 1830s?

A) None of the Biblical prophets or Christ himself had ever condemned slavery.
B) Slavery was an unfortunate legacy of earlier tyrannical acts of the English Parliament and northern colonial merchants.
C) Southern slaves lived better lives than northern factory workers.
D) Slaves belonged to an inferior race.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
What group was vehemently opposed to ending slavery even though they sometimes traded with slaves and keenly resented planters?

A) poor whites
B) yeoman farmers
C) drivers
D) overseers
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In North America, slave revolts were ________; in Latin American slave societies, full-scale revolts were ________.

A) common; extremely rare
B) very rare; nearly nonexistent
C) extremely rare; common and involved large numbers of slaves
D) numerous but small; nearly impossible to organize
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k this deck
34
The major source of southern wealth and the major stimulus to national economic growth was ________.
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k this deck
35
The backbone of southern society, accounting for more than half the southern population and typically owning no slaves, was ________ farm families.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Within the slave community, the ________ and the drivers, who supervised the field hands, enjoyed the highest status.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
In the organization of slave labor, under the ________ system a specific assignment was given to each slave, with the incentive that the workday was over when it was completed.
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k this deck
38
The traditional head of the slave family was the ________.
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39
The most common form of slave resistance was ________.
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40
Particularly disturbing to southerners was the 1831 revolt led by the slave ________.
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41
The politics of slavery in the South meant that southern candidates had to be careful to avoid being seen as ________.
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k this deck
42
A major difference between slavery in North America and Latin America is that in Latin America, ________ were much more frequent.
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k this deck
43
Give three major differences between society and life on the cotton frontier and in the Tidewater region. What was the significance of these differences?
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44
Describe the class structure of the Old South. What was the relationship of slavery to this class structure?
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k this deck
45
What pressures did slavery place on plantation mistresses?
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46
What united slaves in the Old South? Were there significant divisions among slaves?
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k this deck
47
What role did religion play in the lives of slaves? How did that role differ from the role of religion encouraged by many white masters?
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48
Describe the change in attitudes toward slavery in the South before and after the early 1830s. What events contributed to that change?
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49
Compare and contrast slave revolts in North America and Latin America.
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50
The chapter introduction profiles several southerners: Colonel Daniel Jordan, a plantation master in South Carolina; a planter from the Red River country of Texas; Sam Williams, a skilled ironworker slave from Virginia, and his wife Nancy; Octave Johnson, a slave in Louisiana; and Ferdinand Steel, a farmer in Mississippi. Using what you have learned from the text about the class structure of the Old South, to which class does each of these people belong? Explain how each class differs from the others.
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51
What were the major geographical regions of the Old South? Explain how the geography of the South was a force of both unity and division.
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52
How did the conditions of slavery make it especially difficult for slaves to establish their own culture? How did slave communities work to overcome this?
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53
Consider this statement: "Some [southern plantation] women drew a parallel between their situation and that of the slaves."What parallels could plantation mistresses draw? Where do the parallels break down? Do you agree with the mistresses' observations?
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54
Do you believe slavery was the most important factor in shaping southern society? If so, explain why, especially since only one-third of southerners were African American and only one-quarter of southern whites owned slaves or were members of slave-owning families. If you do not believe slavery was the most important factor shaping southern society, what factor was more important?
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55
Give three major differences between the North and the South in this period. What was the significance of each of these differences? Which one do you think was the most important and why?
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56
Explain why the South's dependence on exports made it difficult for an internally diversified economy to develop. How did this dependence retard southern economic development?
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