Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- A note on notes
- PART I AMERICA AND EUROPE: A HISTORY
- PART II THE SOUTH IN SLAVERY AND IN FREEDOM
- PART III CAPITALIST DYNAMICS OF THE RURAL NORTH
- 7 Breakthrough to the Midwest
- 8 Migration and a political culture
- 9 Technological knowledge: reproduction, diffusion, improvement
- 10 The true history of the northern farmer
- PART IV THE NORTH: DYNAMICS OF AN INDUSTRIAL CULTURE
- PART V AMERICAN VALUES IN A CAPITALIST WORLD
- ANNEXES
- Index
8 - Migration and a political culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- A note on notes
- PART I AMERICA AND EUROPE: A HISTORY
- PART II THE SOUTH IN SLAVERY AND IN FREEDOM
- PART III CAPITALIST DYNAMICS OF THE RURAL NORTH
- 7 Breakthrough to the Midwest
- 8 Migration and a political culture
- 9 Technological knowledge: reproduction, diffusion, improvement
- 10 The true history of the northern farmer
- PART IV THE NORTH: DYNAMICS OF AN INDUSTRIAL CULTURE
- PART V AMERICAN VALUES IN A CAPITALIST WORLD
- ANNEXES
- Index
Summary
History books tell us that the United States in 1860 was divided into three parts: South, Northeast, and West. The South had in turn three subregions: the border states, the southeast, and the “Old Southwest”; the Northeast included New England and what had been the Middle Colonies. The Far West had hardly entered into American economic history, except as a land of mining excitements. A new and arid Southwest lay beyond Texas. A new Northwest on the Pacific was replacing the “old Northwest.” The latter had hardly become “old”; its settlement and culture patterns were still vigorously penetrating across into Kansas and Iowa heading into the Great Plains. In each of these three sections – South, Northeast, and Northwest – the population had developed a characteristic social organization and with it a chracteristic culture, which the subregions exemplified with minor variations.
At a century's distance, and with the record of the War in retrospect, the South appears indeed as a nation, a monolith whose economy, politics, society and morality were dominated by the class of slave-owning planters. Slave owners with their families made up less than one-third of the South's white population and less than one-fifth of the entire population, including slaves. The “planters” with ten or more slaves, whose holdings accounted for three-quarters of the slaves and at least three-quarters of the cotton grown, numbered only about 100,000 individuals out of a southern population of about four million slaves and 7,200,000 free persons.
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- Europe, America, and the Wider WorldEssays on the Economic History of Western Capitalism, pp. 115 - 137Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991