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Kay Bradley

Pre civil war south 4/5 - 0 views

  • At the same time, southern intellectuals began to defend slavery as a positive factor. After 1830, white Southerners stopped referring to slavery as a necessary evil. Instead, they argued that it was a beneficial institution that created a hierarchical society superior to the leveling democracy of the North. By the late 1840s, a new and more explicitly racist rationale for slavery had emerged.
  • With the emergence of militant abolitionism in the North, sharpened by slave uprisings in Jamaica and Southampton County, Virginia, the South began to see itself as surrounded by enemies.
  • Before the 1830s, southern statements on slavery had been defensive; afterward, they were defiant.
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  • began to denounce the North’s form of capitalism as “wage slavery.”
  • Beginning in 1837, southern leaders held the first of a series of commercial conventions in an attempt to diversify the southern economy and to rescue the South from northern “pecuniary and commercial supremacy.”
  • Efforts to develop the southern economy were surprisingly successful. Southern railroad mileage quadrupled between 1850 and 1860--although southern track mileage still trailed that of the free states by 14,000. By 1860 Richmond manufactured more tobacco than any other America city and exported more goods to South America than any other American port, including New York.
  • Regional independence was also called for in religion. Due in large part to fear of antislavery agitation, southern Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians sought to sever their denominational affiliations with northern churches
  • Southerners also called for a distinctive and peculiarly southern literature. More than 30 periodicals were founded with the word “Southern” in their title, all intended to “breathe a Southern spirit, and sustain a strictly Southern character.”
Kay Bradley

Pre-Civil War South 5/5 - 0 views

  • By the early 1850s, a growing number of aggressive Southerners had moved beyond earlier calls for separate southern factories, colleges, and churches. Militant nationalists called for the reopening of the slave trade and aggressive annexations of new slave territory in Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • expedition was launched from New Orleans in 1851 to secure Cuba
  • William Walker, “the gray-eyed man of destiny,” to extend slave labor into Latin America.
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  • unsuccessfully invaded Mexico.
  • invasions of Nicaragua.
  • Knights of the Golden Circle, developed plans to create an independent slave empire stretching from Maryland and Texas to northern South America and the West Indies.
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    Pre-Civil War South
Kay Bradley

YouTube - Vietnam - 0 views

shared by Kay Bradley on 26 Apr 11 - No Cached
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