Friday, November 8, 2019
Slavery is The South essays
Slavery is The South essays    Slavery played a dominating and critical role in much of Southern life. In the     struggle for control in America, slavery was the Souths stronghold and the hidden motive     behind many political actions and economic statistics. By dominating Southern life, slavery     also dominated the economic and political aspects of life in the South from 1840 to 1860.     	By the 1840s and 50s the Southern economy had almost completely become      slave and cash crop agriculture based. Without slaves in the south a person was left either     landless and penniless or struggling to get by on a small farm. However, even though     slaves dominated the southern economy, slaveholders only included about 2 to 3 percent     of the population. This small percentage was the amount of people successful in a slave     based, cash crop agricultural, Southern economy. Therefore, the Southern economy was     controlled and dominated by those who did and did not have slaves. Furthermore, with the     high demand for Southern items in Europe and Northern America more slaves were     needed in the South to produce these cash crops. Without slaves there would be no     cotton, tobacco, or sugar production and without these integral items the Southern     economy would absolutely fail. The South depended on slaves to fuel their economy and     therefore slavery dominated their economy.      	Between 1840 and 1860 many political issues, debates, and actions were inflamed     by slavery. As America grew, the South wanted more slave states and the North wanted     more free states to increase their hold in politics. One important act that fueled the slavery     dominated political world of 1840 to 1860 was the Kansas and Nebraska act written by     Stephen Douglas. This act repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and called for     popular sovereignty in Kansas and Nebraska which under the Missouri Compromise had     been free. The Missouri Compromise was originally an act to    ...     
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