History, asked by annabel2004, 9 months ago

Do you think the slave economy increased sectional tension in the antebellum period? How so?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
17

Answer:

During the 1850s, sectional differences within the United States, largely about slavery, grew wider as the country's leaders debated whether to allow slavery to expand into the western territories and as criticism of slavery intensified in some free states.

Defenders of slavery argued that the sudden end to the slave economy would have had a profound and killing economic impact in the South where reliance on slave labor was the foundation of their economy. The cotton economy would collapse. The tobacco crop would dry in the fields. Rice would cease being profitable.

Answered by crkavya123
0

Answer:

The treatment of the slaves was appalling and brutal. They were not permitted to work for businesses, and they received the same treatment as untouchables. They used to sleep through the night without food since they were accustomed to living in tiny huts. The people gave them the leftover food from the house to consume.

Explanation:

slave economy:

Federal authorities organised many forced Native American migrations in the 1820s and 1830s, creating a network of reserves west of the Mississippi River where they forced indigenous peoples from the east to migrate and reside. This was made possible by the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which gave the federal government the authority to survey, partition, and sell millions of acres of land at auction to white investors and settlers. Farmers could now buy dozens or even hundreds of acres in the productive Mississippi River Delta for pennies on the dollar, fulfilling their aspirations of owning a sizable plantation. In the 1830s, property parcels that would have cost thousands of dollars in other, more established locations were sold for a few hundred dollars, at rates as low as 40 per acre.

Cotton was grown by White people and their slave slaves, earning the southwest the nickname "the Cotton Kingdom" [1]. The neighbourhood was flooded with thousands of people.

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