¶ … Nation Divided
Sectional and Constitutional Issues Surrounding the Institution of Slavery in Nineteenth Century America
As the Nineteenth Century dawned, the institution of slavery appeared to be on its way out in the new United States. Independence from Great Britain had removed many of the incentives for growing the cash crops upon which the Southern States had depended. Without the lucrative bounties on rice and indigo, these were no longer worth the expense of producing on a large scale. Tobacco remained a major export, but even so it was insufficient to sustain the entire Southern economy. Luckily, technology came to the rescue. Eli Whitney developed the cotton gin - a machine designed to remove the seeds from cotton bolls. Until the advent of this invention, the harvesting of cotton had been a laborious, time-consuming, and extremely labor intensive business. It was not even worth the labor of the slaves that worked the tobacco, rice, and indigo plantations. However, with the help of Eli Whitney's machine, slaves could provide the manpower to turn the cotton gins, and cotton - a crop which grew well in the South - could be raised on a vast scale. And as this was also the time when England was industrializing, and mechanized cotton mills were springing up everywhere in Manchester and is environs, there was an astronomical increase in the demand for raw cotton. But cotton, was a difficult master. The crop required its harvesters to toil under a blistering sun - hard work that scarcely attracted free labor. Yet, the burgeoning cotton plantation demanded more and more hands to work them. There remained only one answer to this labor shortage - import more slaves.
Nonetheless, this was not as easy as it sounded. At the end...
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