AAAS Test 2
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- Gabriel Prosser
- He failed in leading Virginia slaves in revolt against slavery in the year 1800
- Gabriel Prosser's plan failed due to
- 1) a terrible storm washed out the brides and roads in the city, 2) someone then betrayed him
- what was Gabriel's revolt plan?
- His plan was to capture the arsenal, take over Richmond, then other cities in the state. Virginia would then become a free state
- What happened to Gabriel and etc.
- They were captured, tried, and hanged.
- Significance of Eli Whitney
- His cotton gin made the production of cotton highly profitable as an export, increasing the odds against fighting slavery
- The effect of cotton gin on slavery was that, ...
- Slaves who might have been set free by self-purchase,good service, or the good will of the masters were instead sold to plantions in the Lower South
- "sold down the river"?
- sold to plantions in the Lower South
- Maria Stewart
- education would uplift the AA's
- which states were the "old" states?
- Virginia, Maryland, N. Carolina and S. Carolina (VMC)
- Adeline Cunningham
- an ex-slave from Texas who pg 172
- What was the great paradox of slavery in the beginning of 1800?
- As slavery became more entrenched, as more families were separated and freedom became less attainable, it actually got better in terms of physical treatment. Work was still backbreaking, but diet, murder, personal time improved. Once it was no longer possible to bring lsaves from Africa, slaveholders were forced to treat the slaves better
- Pro-slavery argued that, ...
- Slaves were childlike, in need of direction. Slaves were lazy people, who would not work unless forced to. Slaves were a different species. In short, slavery was a necessary evil.
- William Harper
- Chancellor of the University of South Carolina. Pro-slavery. Argued that slavery was good for black people, and good for the nation. Denied brutality of slavery
- Bible Defence of Slavery
- 1853 Propaganda. Argued that slavery benefitedfrom slavery.
- The slaves worked on an average day __ hours in the summer and __ hours in the winter
- 14, 10
- House slaves was physcially easier but
- mentally taxing.
- Only __ of all slaves lived on plantations with more than 50 slaves
- one quarter
- Edwin Eppes
- On his Louisiana Plantation, at sundown, cotton was weighed, and no matter how much cotton they had picked, they could be whipped. p178
- Solomon Northup
- a kidnapped slave, who told that, at sundown, cotton was weighed, and no matter how much cotton they had picked, they could be whipped
- ___ attended to the overall day-to-day and season-to-season strategy of plantation work, and ____ black drivers were on-the-spot disciplinarians
- white overseers, black drivers
- Daniel R. Hundley
- A pro-slavery southerner who admired and defended slavery. But he admitted that the overseers were cruel
- George Skipwith
- a black driver for John Cocke, a virginia planter, was very liberal with the whip
- it was advantageous use black drivers because:
- they lived with the slaves and was familiar with the slaves outside of work
- Slave codes in the south,
- defined slaves as property, stated that slaves could not travel w/o a pass, or assemble in groups, buying and selling goods, carry arms. White could not teach slaves how to read, sell things to or from slaves
- Slaves parents told their children waht stories
- Br'er RAbbit, the Wolf, and Tar Baby
- These stories taught the children life lessons such as:
- quick-wittedness was an essential survival trait, deception could give the weak control over the strong, might did not always make for right, the slave world was unpredictable
- Slave families were good for the slave owners because ___, and good for the slaves because ___.
- Produced slave children and slaves less rebellious. Gave a poitn of reference that did not begin and end with the master, gave people roles as parents, siblings, etc.
- Louis Highes
- He stood helplessly, watching his master choke his wife his wife for talking back to the mistress
- The slaves's sacred world was reflected in
- song, music, religion, and folk beliefs
- Slaveholders tried to use religion as a tool to ___
- more fully dominate the lives of their slaves
- Slave music, regligion, and fold beliefs were __
- gave slaves a sense of independence, a kind of reedom, and forms of resistance
- "The fugitive's song"
- It was composed in 1845 as a tribute to Frederick Douglass, who had escaped from slavery in 1833 to become a revered abolitionist, newspaper editor, and lecturer
- Slaves who were in ___ had a better chance of escape
- Upper South, close to cities
- Edward Covey
- A man widely known for his ability to break unruly slaves. Fred Douglass was sent to him.
- What's a deeper significance of Fred Douglass' physical victory over Edward Covey (won the fight)?
- He conquered his own fear, regained his spirit, and became resolved to escape slavery
- Examples of individual acts of resistance:
- steal extra food, fought back to avoid whipping, fought their sexual abusers, burned barns, truancy, "played the fool",
- slave patrols
- groups of white males, usually of the lower classes, called together to look for runaways, to prevent slave gatherings, and generally ensure the safety of the white community
- John Brown
- p 193. Georgia slave who ran away several times before finally succeeding. Each time he was captured, whipped, and chained.
- Aunt Cheyney
- A slave who ran away and were killed by her masters dogs who serached for her.
- Henry "Box" Brown
- He literally mailed himself to freedom. He was carried for 27 hours from Richmond to Philadelphia by Adams Express in a box. p 194
- Ellen Craft
- She was a light-skinned slave who Escaped slavery by pretending to be a sickly white man travelling in the company of his slave, who was in fact her darker-skinned husband. She even converse with slaveholders about the trouble of runaway slaves
- Harriet Tubman
- She was called "Moses." She escaped from slavery. It was said that she returned 19 times and rescued more than 300 slaves. Planters offer a $40,000 bounty for her capture
- Underground Railroad
- This network of hiding places run by opponents of slavery provided the slaves food, shelter, money, clothing, and disguise
- William Still
- p 195. An officer of the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee, was the movign force behind the Underground Railroad.
- In general, women had a harder time escaping than men because ___
- they were more reluctant to leave w/o their children. At the same time, it was teh fear of losing them that often provided the incentive to flee
- Truancy
- It is short-term flight. Women practice truancy more than men did because they needed to care for their children. Females also have less opportunity to travel off the farm/home
- Abroad marriage
- a union between slaves who lived on different farms
- "played the fool"
- A technique employed by slaves in order to avoid doing some onerous chore. They would smile humbly and pretend to misunderstand instructions given by the master.
- 3/4 hands, 1/2 hands, 1/4 hands
- Women, especially those of child bearing age, could pretend to be sick to do less work
- it was said that slave women used ______ to bring about miscarriage
- herbs, roots and seeds of cotton palnt, cedar berries
- Dr. John H. Morgan
- a Tenessee physician who wrote that slave women used herbs and berries to bring about miscarriages
- infanticide
- It hurt the women more, emotional and physically (punishment), than it hurt the masters
- Charles Deslondes
- Leader of an uprising in 1811 of about 400 slaves in the Baptist parishes in Louisiana. They sent whites feeing their plantations in New Orleans
- Black people faces hopeless odds, such as
- outnumbered by whites, grouped in small numbers on plantations that were miles apart, whites had the guns
- uprisings with Seminole Indians
- 1817, 1818, and 1835 uprisings. In 1817 and 1818, Blacks joined the Seminole Indians in their fight to keep their Florida homes. They raided plantations in Georgia, killing whites and carrying off slaves. In 1835, blacks joined the Seminoles in their unsuccessful fight against the militias of Florida, Georgia, and Tenessee.
- Seminole lands
- Seminole lands were havens for runaway slaves. By 1830, blakcs and indians had intermarried to teh extent they were indistinguishable.
- Pres. Andrew Jackson
- He was determined to eliminate Seminole indians and seize their lands for white slaveholders
- Denmark Vesey
- He was a literate and free black carpenter. He bought his freedome in 1800. He planned to capture Charleston with his followers. They were betrayed in 1822.
- 1800
- Gabriel Prosser's attempt to seize Richmond, and the year he died. Denmark Vesey bought his freedom. Nat Turner was born
- Peter Poyas
- One of Vesey's lieutenants
- Nat Turner
- He believed himself to be the Moses who would lead his people out of bondage. He led 70 slaves on a killing spree of white people in Virginia. Nat and his men were captured and killed.
- consequence of black rebellions
- Whites lashed out mercilessly at blacks. Anyone suspected of aiding rebellion was put to death. Blacks were not allowed to hold religious services or gather in groups at all.
- April Ellison
- A mulatto expert cotton gin maker, He bought freedom for himself, his wife and daughter. He established a business, hired 2 slaves, and gained permission to worship with whites, away from the slaves and free blacks.
- Sojourner Truth
- A dark-skinned woman. Unlike Ellison and Keckley, she was illiterate. She was freed in 1827 by NY state law. She was a preacher, an abolitionist and an eloquent public speaker for women's right.
- the free black population number ___ in 1790 and grew to ___ by the eve of the civil war
- 59,000 --> 488,000
- Free black population increased due to
- blacks born of free mothers, including white women with black partners, free mulattos immigrants from the West indies, especially those who fled Haiti after the 1790 slave revolt led to L'Ouverture
- Free slaves chose their new names that reflected their:
- complexion (brown), occupation (mason), or names of liberty (freeman, justice), practicality (Ellison)
- William Ellison, formerly April Ellison, chose his master's last number in order
- for his cotton gin manufacturing business to be asscoiated with the wealthy planter
- identification badges
- p 202. both freed blakcs and slves were required to wear id badges.
- 2 advantages Wlilliam Ellison had
- 1. indispensable cotton gin making skills, 2. light skinned
- Free blacks in rural south faced unfavorable circumstances because they were not attached to plantations as carpenters, blacks smiths, etc, so they tried to grow and sell crops, but..
- whites charged exorbitant amounts for rental of land, and slaves had to either be in debt or sign labor contracts
- 1822 Charleston petition
- says "mulattoes were a barreir b/w our own color and that of the black."
- Light color signified ___
- a birth connection to a white person, and so also possible protection
- Cities provided free blacks ___ job and a black network of churches, schools, etc
- unskilled jobs
- Antebellun whites feared free blacks because:
- 1. take away jobs, 2. worked toward abolition, contradict the arguement that blacks can't survive w/o white supervision, 3. threatened cotton profits
- whites ___ to work alongside blacks
- refused
- Laws that restrained rights of free blacks
- forced to carry certificates of freedom, register with authorities, pay taxes, prohibit migration of free blacks, curfews for gatherings, exclusion from theaters and public parks
- of all the southern states, only __, __, and __ gave free blacks right to vote, but by 1835 those rights have been repealed
- Maryland, Tennessee, and North Carolina (MTNC)
- Northwest Ordinance of 1787
- outlawed slavery in NW states, but Illinois, Indiana, and Oregon (IIO) actually excluded black migrants altogether
- conditions for free blacks were probably the best in the __ region of america
- Northeast
- Paradoxically, Economic opportunities increased for free blacks in the south because:
- there were less skilled and unskilled white laborers and white employers were accustumed to hiring blacks
- Free black urban women faced stiff competition from:
- white women of lower classes, immigrant women from Ireland
- Rights that free blacks have that slaves do not:
- marry, read and write, give birth to free children, freer religious practices,
- Absalom Jones's Free African Society
- indepedent black church that many whites objected to
- Black churches are important because:
- it's a corner of life that is unhindered by whites, black churches build schools, conduct self-help activities, offers leadership positions, offer Sunday schools
- Brown Fellowship Society of Charleston, the Friendly Moralist Society, the Humane Brotherhood
- limited membership. Members paid dues. Money is used for sick benefits, burial expenses, and stipends for widows and orphans of members. For the care of some of the poor among Charleston's free black population
- Benevolent societies were notable because they were organized around:
- color (mulattoes). Brown and Friendly are for mulattoes ony. Human Brotherhood was limited to 35 dark men.
- Light complexioned blacks had a better chance of surviving and succeeding than dark-complexioned blacks did because:
- their relatives gave them advantage, education, whites felt less threatened
- Factors that helped with success besides light skin:
- literacy, trade/profession, white connections
- The wealthier the blacks, the ___ his religioius denomination
- emotional (methodist --> episcopal)
- freedom's journal
- first published in NYC in 1827. they preached a gospel of moral purity
- North Star
- Fred Douglass's newspaper - signified black aspirations
- American Anti-Slavery Society
- founded by blacks and whites, it held religious revival-style meetings that condemned slavery
- Liberty Party
- 1840 and 1844 it ran anti-slavery presidential candidates. did not attract a big following
- the anti-slavery alphabet
- published in 1847 for an anti-slavery fair. used simple rhymes to expose children to the horrors of slavery
- Absalom Jones
- African Methoidist Episcopal minister who led anti-slavery protests
- why did blacks celebrate New Year's Day as Independence Day
- anniversary of Haitian independence and end of foreign slave trade in U.S.
- Constitution is bad because:
- international slave trade continued for 20 years,, slaves are 3/5 of a person
- fugitive slave law 1793
- track down fugitive slaves and return them by the government
- gag rule
- all abolitionist petitions were tabled
- American Colonization Society members
- Pres. Madison, Jackson, Francis Scott Key
- ACS argued that:
- Africa is the natural home of black pple, blacks would never be accepted in America, AA would transform Africa into properity and form new trade relationship
- Liberia
- "land of freedom"
- counter colonization arguments
- African tribes, African diseases, America was their country
- Most AA leaders felt that colonization
- was a scheme to protest slavery and preserve freedom for whites only
- Walker's Appeal
- David Walker - meet violence with violence
- Martin Delany
- Go to Africa, harvard-educated physician, politically in africa
- weekly advocate
- phillip bell - black separatis, - OUR CAUSE
- racial solidarity was necessary to
- secur etheir status as full-fledged americans
- Compromise of 1850
- brought CA in as a free state, Fugitive Slave Law - special commisioner who was paid to retunr a slave to an owner than set him free, compelled northerners to catch fugitive slaves
- ecnomic success generated
- confidence and how they responded oppresion
- Eliz. Jennings
- conductor wrestled her to the ground for sitting in the white section. she took her case to court and won
- Harriet Beecher
- uncle tom's cabin
- Dred scott decision
- blacks had no rights that whites need to respect