Importance Of Slavery In America

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Slavery and the Love of Money
A cultural divide is a boundary in society that separates the communities whose social, economic, and religious standards for success are substantially different psychologies.

Slavery was an institution that was more easily implemented into the climate of the southern colonies that the northern ones. Like an invasive plant, it quickly shaped the culture of the South so that life without slavery would have been almost unthinkable. It would be similar to the way coal dominates life here in the Appalachian region. Not only has coal been a source of revenue, it Is “good” money, enabling individuals to take care of his or her family in an area dominated by poverty. While the faculties of coal operations are not inherently evil as with slavery, the
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The climate in the north is usually cooler with harsher winters and shorter growing seasons. The farms in the north were typically much smaller as compared to the vast plantations of the south that sometimes were as large as thousands of acres. While the North held a quarter of the population in urban areas such as New York, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Baltimore, and Boston, most the wealth in the United States was in the South. Joshua Ward, Stephen Duncan, John Burneside and Meredith Calhoun owned almost 3,500 slaves alone on their large plantations; this is compared to the entire state of Delaware in the 1860 census having 587 slave owners with a total of 1,798 slaves. The climate in the South encouraged large plantations filled with cotton and tobacco, where the population of slaves and the population of whites was almost equal. Although the farms in the north were smaller, they were providing the south with food. Northerners were also investing in machines such as plows and mechanical reapers to reduce the labor required for planting and the need for