Name ______Period ______Date ______
Chapter 13
Section 3: Southern CottonKingdom
Introduction
- In the ______the South seemed to be an underdeveloped ______region with prospect for future growth.
- Most Southerners lived along the ______coast in ______, ______, and ______in what became known as the Upper South.
- By the 1850’s the South’s population had spread inland into the ______- a band of states spreading from ______through South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, Arkansas, and ______
- The economy was thriving, and ______grew stronger than ever in the ______
- ______had transformed the stagnant economy of the South into a prosperous, robust economy.
- Rise of the CottonKingdom
- ______had not always been the South’s leading ______
- In colonial times ______was the most profitable crop in ______
- Georgia and South Carolina produced ever-increasing quantities of ______and ______
- ______was raised in southeastern Louisiana
- The Cotton Gin
- The growth of the British ______industry in the late 1700’s had created a huge demand for cotton
- After harvesting, workers had to separate the plants ______from the cotton fibers
- Cotton production was revolutionized in 1793 when ______invented the ______, a machine that removed seeds from cotton fibers 50 times faster than doing it by hand
- New Lands for Cotton
- The removal of ______from the Southeast in the early 1800’s opened the way for expanding ______across the Deep South
- ______springs and summers and ______autumns made the Deep South suitable for cotton production
- On large plantations, cotton growing went hand in hand with ______
- Cotton Rules the Deep South
- Intense demand for cotton in ______kept the price of cotton ______in the years before 1860
- The value of ______people increase because of their key role in producing ______and ______
- The Deep South was committed to producing ______while the Upper South became a center for ______
- Industry’s Limited Role in the South
- Unlike the industrial ______, the South remained mostly ______
- The South accounted for only a small amount of the nations ______in the 1850’s
- Barriers to Industry
Why was there so little industry in the South?
- Boom in ______
- Southerners remained committed to ______
- Lack of available ______
- Many wealthy Southerners believed that an economy and based on ______and ______would continue to ______
- The market for ______was smaller in the South
- Some simply didn’t want ______to flourish
- Southern Factories
- Some Southerners believed that the South was becoming ______on the ______
- There were a few ______in the South
- Southern Transportation
- Natural ______provided the chief means for ______goods in the South
- The ______boom that the North experienced in the 1840’s and 1850’s did not take hold in the South until later
- By ______only about one-third of the nation’s rail lines were in the South
- This would be a problem for the South during the ______