cotton gin?
1/31/2007 11:00:30 AM
thats too early (although its an example of an innovation increasing demand for slaves)
1/31/2007 11:11:50 AM
steam engines, modern agricultural practicesmany southern farm families knew it was heaper to just raise their own kids to do the workslavery was a dying trend in the south
1/31/2007 11:15:28 AM
i dont know, sharecropping was around for awhile and a lot of times wasnt much different than slavery
1/31/2007 11:21:33 AM
most farm families had built in slaves with their children anywayhave 6 or so kids and put them to work as soon as possible
1/31/2007 11:25:02 AM
1/31/2007 11:43:29 AM
http://courses.wcupa.edu/jones/his311/notes/plantati.htmRobert Williams Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman completed aneconomic study of American slavery in TIME ON THE CROSS: THEECOMONICS OF AMERICAN NEGRO SLAVERY (1974). The following data(from pages 73-74) compares average slave prices and wages in theDeep South for the years 1830-1860:Period Hire Price Average annual rate of return1830-1835 127 948 12%1836-1840 1840-1845 143 722 18.5%1846-1850 168 926 17%1851-1855 167 1240 12%1856-1860 196.5 1658 10.3%The figures for 1840-1850 show what happens when the price ofslaves dropped--it became cheaper to buy a slave than to hireone. The only drawback was that it required more up-frontcapital to buy a slave, so not everyone could do that.Looks like it peaked between 1840 and 1850. It also looks like slaves were very expensive. $700-$1200 was BIG money in the mid-19th century. To convert 1860 dollars to 2002 dollars (the closest date I could find), multiply by 19.89. Also, the south was much poorer in this time than it is today. Slaves were well out of reach for all but the wealthiest of southerners. The fact that fewer and fewer people could afford them, coupled with the nationwide abolitionist movement gaining strength at the time and more modern farm equipment, would have killed slavery off anyway.[Edited on January 31, 2007 at 12:12 PM. Reason : ,]
1/31/2007 12:10:24 PM
1/31/2007 12:55:01 PM
1/31/2007 1:11:15 PM
1/31/2007 1:14:15 PM
1/31/2007 1:19:02 PM
^^You don't know what you're talking about.
1/31/2007 1:31:17 PM
1/31/2007 1:36:50 PM
you don't get itat all
1/31/2007 1:40:39 PM
1/31/2007 1:43:05 PM
1/31/2007 1:53:57 PM
1/31/2007 1:55:51 PM
very strong arguement
1/31/2007 2:04:53 PM
1/31/2007 2:10:56 PM
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1/31/2007 2:19:29 PM
1/31/2007 2:26:22 PM
1/31/2007 2:28:39 PM
1/31/2007 2:39:45 PM
I haven't ignored it, plenty of abolitionists were against itand so was alot of the mainstream publicthis thread wasn't talking about slaves building railrods out west, digging mines out west... it was about slaves in the south and the civil war
1/31/2007 2:51:14 PM
The point is slavery wouldn't stop for economic reasons alone.
1/31/2007 2:55:33 PM
You are only thinking of slaves as agricultural workers in the south. there are other industrialized tasks that could be done in the south with slave labor. That is the point. Just because it may not have been economically feasible to have slaves work in the fields does not mean it wasn't economically feasible to have slaves do other tasks (read in the south). furthermore, VA while it was witnessing its slave population decrease, still pushed for it to be legal because they were breeding the slaves and selling them further in the south. It produced vasts amounts of money since slaves could no longer be imported.
1/31/2007 2:57:17 PM
and since the supply of fresh slaves was cut off (other than births)the cost was becoming prohibitively more expensivehence using kids as a labor force (ahem, factories up north)the stupid ass war that killed so many people, had less to do with slavery than people make it out to be... because people don't like to hear about everyone not holding hands and getting along, they don't want to know that elected leaders are fucked up sometimes, they want to know their ancestors fought the big bad meanies from the south because they had slaves and that the north and all of it's citizens were well above things as slavery and racismyay for changing history to qualify reasons for war (sound familiar huh)I can't imagine being in Lincolns shoes having to make those decisions, but I guess the more things change the more they stay the same, especially in politics[Edited on January 31, 2007 at 3:05 PM. Reason : .]
1/31/2007 2:59:56 PM
north did nothing wrong... dont imply as much or the whole conversation will break down into defensive hand waving
1/31/2007 3:01:26 PM
1/31/2007 3:17:21 PM
that wasn't a common thing
1/31/2007 3:21:34 PM
1/31/2007 3:29:38 PM
1/31/2007 3:35:53 PM
1/31/2007 3:46:32 PM
1/31/2007 3:47:38 PM
1/31/2007 3:59:36 PM
1/31/2007 4:03:08 PM
I guess that explains why you think that everyone that isn't poor or lower middle class is somehow extremely wealthy tooyou're not making sense here yo[Edited on January 31, 2007 at 4:04 PM. Reason : ^^^ ]
1/31/2007 4:04:26 PM
during that time period it was a large split. there was no middle class in the agrarian south.
1/31/2007 4:07:02 PM
and the south wasn't spilling over with your "gone with the wind" types either
1/31/2007 4:15:46 PM
1/31/2007 4:40:18 PM
1/31/2007 4:49:06 PM
1/31/2007 4:59:20 PM
^ that's been adressed already ... move along
1/31/2007 5:03:21 PM
That does not really make sense. England will buy whatever cotton is cheaper and that Southern Farmers were being yanked off the world market by tariffs is kind of relevant. England shifted its source away from America and to India because it had to, not because Indian cotton was automatically cheaper. Southern Americans were subsistence farmers, they had no other options available, so they would take whatever price was offered on the world market. But they were being forbidden from even doing that, thanks to America's mercantilist policies.
1/31/2007 5:04:27 PM
You really have no understanding of the British empire do you? Trade companies with in the Empire were given monopolies on certain comodities. Cotton was one of them. Even after secession, Britain was getting cotton cheaper from India than it was from the southern states. The south over estimated the value of their cotton.
1/31/2007 5:08:38 PM
I think you're mixing up your eras. At this time in British History that was not the case. No Trade Company had a monopoly on cotton because England was a major consumer of American cotton as well as other commodities.
1/31/2007 5:16:02 PM
I'm not confusing my eras. Look at cotton production in India. during this period, India produced more cotton than the south and did it cheaper because of the monopolies.
1/31/2007 5:21:39 PM
That is quite contradictory. "Monopolies" do not equal "Cheaper"
1/31/2007 5:26:16 PM