Slavery In The Lower South Analysis

720 Words2 Pages

Slavery was an integral part of the Lower Southern economy and agricultural production. In his essay, “The Domestic Slave Trade,” historian Steven Deyle discusses the changing demand of slavery in America. Changes of agricultural production resulted in a surplus of slaves in some regions, such as the Chesapeake, however, with the invention of the cotton gin in 1792, an “almost insatiable demand for slaves developed in the new cotton states.” This new demand of slaves helped facilitate the domestic slave trade in America, and served as a new source of slaves, as all importation of slaves was ended in 1808. These slaves that were sold from the Upper South to the Lower South, therefore, were often born in America, guaranteeing a “steady supply …show more content…

In the South, slaves were at the bottom of the social hierarchy, creating a safety net for all poor whites. Similarly, in the North, as written by Edward Everette Hale, “the very ‘inferiority’ of the immigrants… compels them to go to the bottom; and the consequence is that we are, all of us, the higher lifted.” This new social change was not explicitly acknowledge by McPherson, however, it offers a greater understanding of social structure in the North. With the safety net of immigrants in the North, and slaves in the South, exemplifies the fact that social hierarchy was not only a characteristic of the South, however, the basis of this hierarchy differed. In the North, it was based on economic status and whether one was born in the U.S. or an immigrant, while in the South, racial and gender hierarchy were the basis of …show more content…

In the essay, “The Political Ideology of Secession in South Carolina,” historian Manisha Sinha examines South Carolina’s approach to defending slavery with proslavery thought and justification. Sinha wrote, “for most slaveholders in South Carolina, the so-called natural and divinely ordained differences of race and sex further proved that the principle of inequality was the basis of all social organization.” With a strong connection to social hierarchy and tradition, the creation of a Christian defense to slavery is logical for justifying support of the institution of

Open Document