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Abolitionism

Enduring Vision Ch.12 Notes

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Chapter 12: The old south and slavery 1830-1860 I. Introduction: A. Nat Turner Rebellion 1. Nat Turner and six other slaves broke into Joseph Travis? home, where they killed Travis, his wife, and two other whites, and later on the infant. They traveled around killing whites. The membership was about 60/70 and they killed over 60 whites. The white militia took control and slaughtered blacks even if they weren?t involved. Turner went to trial and then was hung. B. Before the Turner Rebellion Virginians had worried little of slave rebellions. C. Non-slaveholding whites in the western par of the state, urged that Virginia follow the lead of northern states and emancipate slaves. D. The south had been split.

Enduring Vision 8E Chapter 12 outline

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Chapter 12: The Old South and Slavery, 1830-1860, pg 341-371 CHAPTER LEAD-IN, pg 341 Nat Turner (literate preacher and prophet) uprising: August 22, 1831, South Hampton County, Virginia Led six other slaves to slaughter Joseph Travis, his wife, an infant and two other whites in the house with axes Moved into the countryside in gathered more followers killing whites as they went White militia & vigilantes responded by overpowering Turner?s Group and other blacks not involved, those not kill the sight were arrested and hanged Before execution Turner stated he was not personally mistreated by owners but his religious conviction that all slavery was evil in an offense to god Gabriel Prosser ?one other slave that had plotted rebellion but was caught before happening

Chapter 20 AP World History Outline

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Chapter 20 Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade I. Introduction A. Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua ? symbol of slavery 1. Muslim trader > African slavery > African slave trade > Missionary B. Impact of outsiders on Africa 1. Islam first, then African developed at own pace, West had big impact C. Influence of Europe 1. Path of Africa becomes linked to European world economy 2. Diaspora ? mass exodus of people leaving homeland 3. Slave trade dominated interactions 4. Not all of Africa affected to the same degree D. Effects of global interactions 1. Forced movement of Africans improved Western economies 2. Transfer of African culture > adapted to create new culture 3. Most of African still remained politically independent

Vocabulary for Chapter 15 of Out of Many

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Stephen Douglas- Stephen Douglas was a northern politician and supporter of popular sovereignty that was a leading voice in the Compromise of 1850. He and Lincoln debated in the famous Lincoln-Douglas Debates in the election for an Illinois senate seat in 1858, which he won. Comment by Erin Bohn: PLEASE start numbering these! I have put this comment on your papers nearly every time. Abraham Lincoln- At this time, Abraham Lincoln was a rising star in the Republican Party and was emerging on the national stage. As a result of his famous campaign against Douglas and his public adversity to slavery, he quickly became a contentious public figure that gained no support amongst southerners who saw him and his party as threatening their very livelihoods.

Vocabulary for Chapter 6 of Out of Many

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Chapter 10: Eli Whitney- an American inventor that created the cotton gin which made cotton highly profitable and caused slavery, which had been on the decline, to explode throughout the South ?sold down the river?- this refers to the shipping of slaves from the upper southern states such as Kentucky down the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers to the Deep South to cotton farms; this was a threat commonly used by white slave owners in the middle states and was seen as a death sentence by slaves Manumission- manumission refers to the emancipation of slaves; generally from the invention of the cotton gin and onward, manumissions became less common

Revolutions and National States in the Atlantic World

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Kinberg, Nicholas Michael Chakmakian AP World History 14 August 2015 Chapter 29 Outline Revolution, Industry, Empire, 1750 ? 1914 19th, Euros ctrl?d. Asia/Africa, mestizos ctrl?d.Americas Revolution, industrialization, imperialism helped them dominate Revolution transformed Euro/Americas in 18th/19th Broke 1stin North America, 13 Brit colonies rebelled/won indep. Joined to form republic, United States of America, drew on Enlightenment values freedom, =ity, popular sovereignty Inspired France to abolish monarchy/aristocracy, est. republic based on same stuff Turmoil brought down French republic, Enlightenment influenced France after

African and the Atlantic World

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Kinberg, Nicholas Michael Chakmakian AP World History 9 August 2015 Chapter 25 Outline Africa/Atlantic 1760-92, west African man Thomas Peters crossed Atlantic 4 times 1760, slaveraiders captured Peters, went to coast, sold him to French slave merchants Traveled in slave ship to French colony Louisiana, worked on sugar plantation Attempted to escape 3 times, master beat, branded forced him to wear shackles 1760s, sold to English, 1770, Scottish landowner in North Carolina bought him 1770s, English in North America rebelled against Brits War broke, went to wife/daughter in Brit lines/joined Black Pioneers, escaped slaves who fought to maintain Brits in colonies Colonists won, Petersescaped to Nova Scotia with fam./former slaves

Chapter 12 - Brinkley 13th edition

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Ch. 12 Conditions in 1800s Growing separation between church and state Desire to create respectable culture for literature and arts, modeled after Europeans Growth of nationalism gave rise to nationalistic culture: Wanted to assimilate immigrants into American culture Immigrants: Wanted to do away with cultural traits brought in by foreigners (Temperance movements) Rapid economic change also affected culture, gave rise to education reform Medical Advancement Phrenology developed ? pseudoscience, attributing physical size of brain to psychological traits Fowler Brothers discovered Sylvester Graham proposed vegan diet William Morton developed anesthetic Growing popularization of baths, cold and hot, sulfur baths as well Oliver Holmes discovered contagion of diseases

Chapter 11 - Brinkley 13th edition

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Chapter 11: Life in the South Rise of Cotton- Inconsistency/decline in tobacco production -Reduced demand at absence of Europeans/internalized trade -Malignant towards soil (bad for soil) -Insufficient land Higher demand for cotton in northern states, in Europe -Short-staple cotton for more efficient production, can grow anywhere in the south >More cost-efficient >Cotton gin invention helped expand popularity/spread of short-staple cotton Attempts to grow rice and sugarcane -Rice is too complicated -Sugarcane is too expensive South-North Economic Relations- Two-way dependency between regions in trade Southern Railroads -Local -Deemed obsolete/useless -Underdeveloped -No connections to any major railroads Slavery 1808 Abolition of Slave Trade -Boosts internal slave trade

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