chapter 19 notes (19.1-19.5)

9
The Worlds of North and South Chapter 19

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Page 1: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

The Worlds of North and South

Chapter 19

Page 2: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

19.1 Introduction

• Eli Whitney changed the South with his invention of the cotton gin.

Page 3: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

19.2 Geography of the North

• 4 distinct seasons; cold winters, hot, humid summers.• Hundreds of bays for harbors. Rocky soil, not good for

farming.• Central Plains were good for farming.• Much deforestation—clearing trees for wood.

Page 4: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)
Page 5: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

19.3 Geography of the South

• Mild winters; long, hot, humid summers.• Fertile lowlands, many marshes and swamps.• Perfect for growing rice, sugar, indigo, tobacco

(cash crops).

Page 6: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

19.4 Economy of the South

• South’s economy was based on AGRICULTURE. Most southerners were agrarians (favored a way of life based on farming).

• Most had small farms.• Slavery beginning to decline in late 1700s; prices went

down (tobacco, indigo) and cotton was difficult.

Page 7: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

Why Was Cotton King?

• The cotton gin made cotton profitable. Cotton was South’s most important crop. Earned more money than all other exports combined.

• With the spread of cotton, demand for slaves increased. 1790 to 1850, number of slaves rose 600%.

• Southerners put all their money into slaves and land, and almost none into building factories.

Page 8: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)

19.5 Economy of the North

• The North experienced the Industrial Revolution—the shift from handmade goods to machine-made goods. This resulted in new jobs, increased production, and improved efficiency in agriculture.

• The Indust. Rev. changed northern agriculture with Cyrus McCormick’s reaper. It could cut 28xs more grain than a single man.

Page 9: Chapter 19 Notes (19.1-19.5)