APUSH Chapter 16- The South and the Slave Controversy Flashcards
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1411348067 | As a result of the introduction of the cotton gin, | slavery was reinvigorated | 0 | |
1411348068 | All of the following were true of slavery in the South except that | most slaves were raised in single unstable parent households | 1 | |
1411348069 | In the pre-Civil War South, the most uncommon and least successful form of slave resistance was | armed insurrection | 2 | |
1411348070 | The profitable southern slave system | hobbled the economic development of the region as a whole | 3 | |
1411348071 | Many abolitionists turned to political action in 1840 when they backed the presidential candidate of the | Liberty Party | 4 | |
1411348072 | Those in the north who opposed the abolitionists believed that these opponents of slavery | were creating disorder in America | 5 | |
1411348073 | The idea of recolonizing blacks back to Africa was | supported by the black leader Martin Delaney | 6 | |
1411348074 | Most white southerners were | subsistence farmers | 7 | |
1411348075 | Plantation agriculture was wasteful largely because | its excessive cultivation of cotton despoiled good land | 8 | |
1411348076 | Regarding work assignments, slaves were | generally spared dangerous work | 9 | |
1411348077 | Most slaves were raised | in stable two-parent households | 10 | |
1411348078 | William Lloyd Garrison pledged his dedication to | the immediate abolition of slavery in the south | 11 | |
1411348079 | The voice of white southern abolitionism fell silent at the beginning of the | 1830s | 12 | |
1411348080 | All of the following were true of the American economy under Cotton Kingdom except | the South reaped all the profits from the cotton trade | 13 | |
1411348081 | By 1860, life for slaves was most difficult in the | newer states of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana | 14 | |
1411348082 | As a result of white southerners' brutal treatment of their slaves and their fear of potential slave rebellions, the south | developed a theory of biological racial superiority | 15 | |
1411348083 | The following abolitionists are matched with their role in the movement. | Wendell Phillips- abolitionist golden trumpet Frederick Douglass- black abolitionist Elijah P. Lovejoy- abolitionist martyr William Lloyd Garrison- abolitionist newspaper publisher | 16 | |
1411348084 | In arguing for the continuation of slavery after 1830, southerners | placed themselves in opposition to much of the rest of the western world | 17 | |
1411348085 | By 1860, slaves were concentrated in the "black belt" located in the | Deep South states of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana | 18 | |
1411348086 | As a substitute for the wage-incentive system, slaveowners most often used the | whip as a motivator | 19 | |
1411348087 | The following events are in chronological order. | 1. American Colonization Society 2. American Anti-Slavery Society 3. Liberty Party | 20 | |
1411348088 | Northern attitudes toward free blacks can best be described as | disliking the individuals but liking the race | 21 | |
1411348089 | The most pro-Union of the white southerners were | mountain whites | 22 | |
1411348090 | Slaves fought the system of slavery in all of the following ways except by | refusing to get an education | 23 | |
1411348091 | For free blacks living in the north, | discrimination was common | 24 |