Untitled Flashcards Set


1.

Front: Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin, boosting cotton production
Back: 1793


2.

Front: Gabriel Prosser’s slave rebellion plot discovered in Richmond, VA
Back: 1800


3.

Front: Millions of Americans begin migrating westward, especially to cotton-producing areas
Back: 1800–1850


4.

Front: The Creek War leads to U.S. seizure of 24 million acres and Native removal begins
Back: 1813–1814


5.

Front: Denmark Vesey’s planned revolt uncovered; The Citadel founded afterward
Back: 1822


6.

Front: U.S. enslaved population reaches about 2 million
Back: 1830


7.

Front: Nat Turner leads a violent slave rebellion in Virginia; harsher Black Codes follow
Back: 1831


8.

Front: Arkansas joins the Union as a slave state
Back: 1836


9.

Front: Texas and Florida admitted to the Union as slave states
Back: 1845


10.

Front: Most Southern states eliminate property requirements for white male voters
Back: 1850


11.

Front: U.S. enslaved population reaches 4 million; 95% of Black population lives in the South
Back: 1860


12.

Front: Cotton production hits 5 million bales—75% of world’s supply
Back: 1860


13.

Front: Southern population reaches 8 million whites, 3 million Black people
Back: 1860


14.

Front: 1 in 3 Southerners is Black; in some states like MS and SC, Black populations outnumber whites
Back: 1860


15.

Front: Cotton Kingdom stretches from South Carolina to Texas, driven by internal slave trade
Back: 1860


16.

Front: Only 12% of the Southern population lives in urban areas
Back: 1860


Key Individuals


17.

Front: Who invented the cotton gin and increased demand for enslaved labor?
Back: Eli Whitney (1793 invention)


18.

Front: Who led a failed rebellion near Richmond, VA, in 1800?
Back: Gabriel Prosser


19.

Front: Who planned a slave revolt in Charleston in 1822 and inspired the creation of The Citadel?
Back: Denmark Vesey


20.

Front: Who led a violent slave rebellion in Virginia in 1831?
Back: Nat Turner


21.

Front: Who was a free Black astronomer and surveyor who helped plan D.C.?
Back: Benjamin Banneker


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