Chapter 12
Approximately how many slaves joined Christian denominations by 1860?
20 percent
In the antebellum period, which of the following was in the Old Southwest?
Mississippi
Why were theories of racial superiority significant in the South?
They created a sense of unity that bridged class divisions among most southern whites.
Southerners used all of the following to justify slavery EXCEPT
Thomas Jefferson's words in the Declaration of Independence
Life in the Old Southwest was characterized
all of the above
The Old Southwest
attracted thousands of settlers in the 1820s and 1830s with its promise of cotton production
As southerners moved farther west and south between 1812 and 1860:
cotton production soared
By the 1830s, most Baptists and Methodists in the South
defended slavery
William Lloyd Garrison
demanded immediate emancipation of slaves
Sarah and Angelina Grimké
demanded women's rights as well as abolition
If poor southern whites seemed lazy it was likely because of
dietary deficiencies and diseases like hookworm
In the antebellum period, southerners viewed their region as
distinctive from the rest of the country
Slave owners in the antebellum South acquired additional slaves from
domestic slave trade
Despite a great diversity of origins in the colonial population, the South
drew few overseas immigrants after the Revolution
All of the following are true about Sojourner Truth, EXCEPT that
she killed her master to escape from slavery
Free blacks in the South
sometimes owned slaves
The frequency of dueling in the South was probably caused by
southerners' exalted sense of honor
Plantation mistresses
supervised the domestic household
Small farmers in the South
supported white supremacy
By the 1830s, John C. Calhoun was arguing
that slavery was a "positive good"
Because of the dominance of agriculture, the South was becoming increasingly dependent upon:
the North
The focus on cotton and other cash crops has obscured the degree to which:
the antebellum South fed itself from its own fields
Slave owners in the antebellum South acquired additional slaves from:
the domestic slave trade
The major reason the South did not industrialize was that:
the profitability of plantation slavery reduced the motivation to industrialize
The killing of Elijah Lovejoy showed
the rampant racism in the North
Gullah refers to
the slave culture of coastal Georgia and South Carolina
The Tredegar Iron Works
was the most important single manufacturing enterprise in the Old South
Slave rebellions in the South
were sometimes betrayed before they started
Frederick Douglass
wrote a famous account of his life as a slave
When in 1855 a slave named Celia killed her sexually abusive master, she was:
hanged
By 1860, slavery was most concentrated:
in the Lower South
Before slavery became institutionalized in the South, enslaved workers were initially treated like:
indentured servants
By the antebellum period, all of the following remained significant staple crops in the South EXCEPT:
indigo
The debate over slavery split Methodists and Baptists
into northern and southern denominations
The slave revolt led by Nat Turner
killed dozens of whites before its suppression
The slave revolt led by Nat Turner:
killed more than 50 whites before its suppression
Most slaves in the lower South:
labored on large plantations
Slave religion
mixed African and Christian elements
Slave religion:
mixed African and Christian elements
Salve women
often worked in the fields
What portion of the South's white population had a proprietary interest in slaves?
one fourth
Southern planters
owned at least twenty slaves
The movie Gone with the Wind
presents a mythic view of the Old South
The impact of African culture on slave culture:
remained evident in African American culture long after slavery ended
On what basis did John Quincy Adams, "Old Man Eloquent," protest the "gag rule" concerning abolition petitions?
It violated the First Amendment
The efforts of the American Colonization Society resulted in the creation of the African nation of
Liberia
In Charleston, blacks outnumbered whites, leaving the ruling
elite almost hysterically determined to quash any slave uprising
The rapid expansion of the cotton belt in the South:
ensured that the region became more dependent on enslaved black workers
Harriet Beecher Stowe's book, Uncle Tom's Cabin:
exposed the dark side of southern culture
The plantation mistress:
generally confronted a double standard in terms of moral and sexual behavior
