19th Century Slavery

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Black people were brought to America from Africa during 17th, 18th, and 19th century. They were forcibly transported to Atlantic in slave ships and sold to work on sugar and cotton farms in the southern states. Due to the demand increase for cotton in Europe in the first half of the 19th century, it resulted in the primary growth of cotton industry in Southern states. However, the demand for cotton in Europe increased the demand for slave labor that can be blamed for the failure of the Southern economy to adjust to changed economic levels. The South’s economic growth and standard of living were comparable to other countries who did well economically at the time, but it could not compare to the North in terms of industrialization. Southern states …show more content…

There was a segregation policy which meant blacks had to have their schools, own churches, own football teams and even own cemetery. Due to industrial growth that attracted large number of European immigrants in the north, it led to a higher rate of population growth which Southern side failed in. The Southern states started losing its influence in national government which was their only way to protect their economic interests as well as the institution of slavery. By the 18th century, America could not be seen as being a homogenous society. Clearly defined states could be identified that had different outlooks and different values. Which later was seen in the North versus South divide that created the two sides in the war. By April 1861, slavery had become entwined with state rights, the power of the federal government over the states and the South’s ‘way of life’. It made a significant contribution to the causes of the American Civil War.It later seen in the North versus South divide that created the two sides. The South was an agricultural region where cotton and tobacco were the main backbone of the area’s economic strength which relied on free labor from the slaves. Slavery was seen as part of the southern way of …show more content…

These differences became the essential difference between north and south. Even after the liberation of slaves after the swearing in of Abraham Lincoln, the southern side was not viewed as a safe place for blacks as they were still considered as slaves. While the two sides were apart in many areas, it became worse when there was a perception that North would try to impose its values on the South. African slaves first arrived in Portugal in the 14th century. And the slave trade that followed soon drained Africa of some of its best agricultural, architectural and creative minds. The slavery led to the low economic level in Africa which is still felt across Africa. The enslaved Africans found themselves dependent on their captors for food clothing and shelter, which has subjected their descendants to the inequalities of colonization for decades. One of the long time effects is loss of culture. The vital attribute of shared culture was exterminated through acts of forced assimilation during enslavement. As a result, Afro-descendants speak a combination of English, Spanish and Portuguese, the languages of their colonizers (Akram). Racial discrimination is also a significant effect of

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