Preview

Cotton And Slavery

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
591 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Cotton And Slavery
The antebellum south was built on the success of cotton. Cotton is a fiber used in many products, such as fabric and paper. Throughout the 1790's, the production of tobacco declined because of soil depletion and diminishing value; simultaneously, in Europe the fabric industry was growing, creating an international demand for cotton clothing ("The Cotton Economy and Slavery"). When Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, this provided the South with the machinery for the expansion in the global economy and also brought back slavery.
According to the Britannia.com, Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin machine in 1793, it was designed to clean "cotton of its seeds". Eli Whitney was an inventor who focused on reducing the cost of manufacturing , customize parts to make the assembling process faster and make devices easier to repair. On a boat to South Carolina he met the widow of Nathanael Greene, a famous General in the American Revolutionary war and was then invited to come to her house. While there he learnt of the problems associated with growing and harvesting cotton. Cotton was not grown very often because it's production was very low and very labor intensive. Thus, Eli Whitney being the innovator that he was,
…show more content…
As mentioned in the "Cotton and Slavery in America" video, by the 1860's the Southern states were providing 75% of the world's cotton. Cotton did not only make the south wealthy, it boosted the entire US economy and helped fueled industrial production in Europe as well. Cotton became such a force that the South began thinking of seceding from the US, which lead to the term, "King Cotton" to demonstrate that the South could be successful, ("Cotton and Slavery"). This communicated to the North that an independent Confederacy would be economically viable through cotton

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Cotton, along with tobacco, rice and indigo, is a major crop grown in the plantation of the Americas extended beyond the Caribbean and Brazil. The plantations were based on African slavery. Cheap labor was essential for the plantations to become profitable, but it was intensive. By mid-19th…

    • 229 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The growth of the cotton kingdom, however, widened the gap between the South on the one hand and the North and the West on the other. Cotton growing, for one thing, revitalized slavery. In 1790, slavery had seemed an increasingly unprofitable and dying institution. With the advent of the cotton gin, however, many planters thought that slavery was necessary again.…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in the late 1800’s. Its original purpose was to help people separate cotton fibers from their seeds. This process was necessary in order to use the cotton in its proper way. This invention came at a time when slavery was starting to slowly become less crucial to the nation’s economy and freeing slaves was gaining momentum. The cotton gin soiled all plans of reducing slavery by increasing production of cotton and completely revamping slavery in the south. It made slaves monetarily worth more; by making cotton a cash crop; cheap to grow and much easier to pick.…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Slavery formed the backbone of the South economically. It was just as much the political and social basis of Southern identity, too. With the invention of Eli Whitney’s cotton gin, southern plantation owners had to buy more slaves to keep up with the demand for cotton. There was an ever-present demand, particularly by Northern states, for cotton. There became a growing economic dependence on slavery. James Henry Hammond’s manual, Instructions to His Overseer (c. 1840-1850), was designed for use on his large South Carolina estate. He was a strong supporter of slavery and the originator of the famous line, “Cotton is king.”…

    • 1709 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eli Whitney's Cotton Gin

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Before this invention, cotton was a declining cash crop because it was not as profitable as other cash crops. However, it was vital to the industry of the United States, so the southern economy suffered. After this machine was invented, cotton became very profitable and the southern economy boomed. Prior to this invention, factory workers could only process about a pound of cotton per day. After the invention, the factory workers could process fifty pounds of cotton in a single day. In 1791, cotton production in the United States was about two-million pounds per year. In 1860, that number was up to one billion. That is a dramatic increase, all due to Whitney’s cotton gin. Since farmers could produce so much cotton, this paved the way for the south’s cotton trade, which also had a major impact on the…

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To begin with, after hearing that Southern planters were in need of a way to make growing and producing cotton profitable Eli Whitney invented a machine he liked to call the cotton gin.2 Whitney’s invention was able to change the way cotton was harvested and cleaned. Slaves used to only be able to harvest a single pound a day but with this machine 50 pounds could be harvested in the same amount of…

    • 718 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first invention by Eli Whitney while in Georgia in 1793 is a simple machine that separates cotton fibers from the seeds. The modern mechanical cotton gin was invented in the United States in 1793. The gin has wire teeth mounted on a boxed rotating cylinder that, pulls cotton fiber through small grates to separate the seeds, while a rotating brush removes lint from the spikes to avoid jams. Eli applied for the invention on October 28, 1793; the invention was granted on March 14, 1794, but was not validated until 1807.…

    • 322 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Slaves would pick the cotton from plants that contained sharp thorns, which would be a very time-consuming process. Many slaves would be injured this way because of the thorns. The cotton gin would produce more than 50 pounds of cotton per day, picking much more than a slave could. Cotton fabric became cheaper at the time due to the mass production of the product in many plantations. There was much competition in the cotton trade. In the early 19th century, farmers in the Southern states were utilizing most of their land to grow cotton. Cotton was demanded by textile mills, which eventually lead to plantations needing more slaves for labor. Plantations that grew cotton became successful in states like Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. The slave population in the south grew from 700,000 to more than 3 million slaves in 1850. With the invention of the cotton gin, came more demand in…

    • 1297 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Southern economy was built on the labor of African American slaves. With the invention of the cotton gin in 1793, the cotton industry became the lucrative field for the south. Slave labor cut costs as it produced cotton for sale to other regions and exports to England. In exchange, southerner’s would purchase manufactured goods from the north. The southern cotton industry served as an engine of growth for the entire nation’s economy in the antebellum years. Another economic issue that divided the nation was tariffs. The south had intentions of keeping tariffs low, since they had an import- oriented economy, but the north wanted high tariffs. While it could produce sufficient food to support itself, thanks to an agriculturally based economy, but it lacked means of transporting it to soldiers and civilians in areas further away from the plantations in which it was grown on. Slave labor was a necessity to southerners because they believed that a white man should not do the back breaking labor required to produce cotton, tobacco, rice and indigo. Also slaves were cheap labor and with approximately 3 million slaves they were of convenient numbers to cut the time in which it would take to tend to the fields. The south was resourceful: they had seven out of the eight military colleges in the country; they established armories and foundries in several states; they built…

    • 1048 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eli Whitney wrote to his father of his life after college. He wrote to him over his machine, who could operate it producing much more cotton then picking it by hand and could also function by something that exerts greater force making it easier on a human. The cotton gin was…

    • 1338 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Europeans discovered that North America had astronomical lands that are needed to take care of. By taking care of the lands, it means having African slaves as laborers (Martinez). They worked in the field of growing crops such as tobacco. By the end of the American Revolution they had seen a visible decrease in the prices of tobacco (Martinez). The Northerner Eli Whitney invented cotton gin. It is a device for making the cotton grows faster in the south and making it easy to mill the fabric (Dawkin). Cotton was the reason behind making slaves profitable again, after the tobacco prices were dropped down. As slaves were tortured and they felt like everything needs to stop. The act of Underground Railroad started to let slaves escape…

    • 129 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The problems are that it’s very labor intensive up until the time of 1793 when Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, which removed seeds from cotton. Still important to pick, which is where slaves came in.…

    • 2117 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Black slavery in the South created a bond among white Southerners and cast them in a common mold. Slavery was also the source of the South 's large agricultural wealth, which led to white people controlling a large black minority. Slavery also caused white Southerners to realize what might happen to them should they not protect their own personal liberties, which ironically included the liberty to enslave African Americans. Because slavery was so embedded in Southern life and customs, white leadership reacted to attacks on slavery after 1830 with an ever more defiant defense of the institution, which reinforced a growing sense among white Southerners that their values eventually divided them from their fellow citizens in the Union. The South of 1860 was uniformly committed to a single cash crop, cotton. During its reign, however, regional differences emerged between the Lower South, where the linkage between cotton and slavery as strong, and the Upper South, where slavery was relatively less important and the economy more diversified. Plantations were the leading economic institution in the Lower South. Planters were the most prestigious social group, and, though less than five percent of white families were in the planter class; they controlled more than forty percent of the slaves, cotton, and total agricultural wealth. Most had inherited or married into their wealth, but they could stay at the top of the South 's class structure only by continuing to profit from slave labor. Planters had the best land. The ownership of twenty or more slaves enabled planters to use a gang system to do both routine and specialized agricultural work, and also permitted a regimented pace of work that would have been impossible to impose in free agricultural workers. Teams of field hands were supervised by white overseers and black drivers, slaves selected for their management skills and agricultural knowledge.…

    • 1262 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The cotton gin is a machine invented by Eli Whitney in 1793 that multiplied the amount of cotton that could be cleaned at once. The cotton gin is important to an understanding of…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gilded Age Analysis

    • 804 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Southern America, however, thrived from the slave labor of African Americans brought over from Africa or native Americans enslaved by the “old immigration” European settlers. Cotton, grown from the hard labor of black slaves dominated the southern market place. As mentioned in the book Southern Crossing: A History of the American South, 1877 - 1906 by Edward L. Ayes, cotton brought with it problems such as tenancy among races, fewer live stocks and less grain. This reliance on cotton created a whole in the Southern economy due to the heavy reliance on its production. (Ayes) The entire Southern financial stability relied on whether there was a good crop season or sale on the trade market. This issue became the major problem faced by Southern American after the civil war. The Southern economy did not know how to produce wealth as it once did in the past, after formal slavery was abolished when the thirteenth amendment was passed in…

    • 804 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays