there isn't really a name for them, they are like any state but they have slavery. you could call them southern slave states or slave states, or southern states...... there is no definition for slave states that didnt secede proir to the civil war
During the Civil War, slaves would defy their owners in the Southern States. The slave owners would punish them for their defiance as well as their attempts to escape to the North.
it helped the civil war by sparking the thoughts of war because of slaveryThe Civil War started when some of the Southern states seceded from the Union. So really the secession of the Southern states was the cause of the Civil War.
Texas was a southern state during the Civil War.
actually, the lives of slaves became more difficult after civil war. mostly all slaves were in southern side. slave-owners didnt educate them or slaves didnt know how to handle bussines....this made there life difficult
five southern slave states 1. mississippi 2. georgia 3. louisiana 4. alabama 5. texas
The plentiful farmland and a greater need for labor Type your answer here...What were the natural resources and economic conditions that encourage southern planters to develop a slave economy in the south before the American civil war?</zzz> </zzz>
The slave-owning southern states.
Mason dixon line
The economy was based on the practice of slave-labour.
The eleven "Southern" states that seceded from the Union were all "slave" states. The slave holding states of Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware were termed to be "border" states and geographically, none of them can be describes as "Southern" states, especially Delaware.
there isn't really a name for them, they are like any state but they have slavery. you could call them southern slave states or slave states, or southern states...... there is no definition for slave states that didnt secede proir to the civil war
Harriet Tubman
Harriet Tbman
Harriet Tubman
The invention that had a huge impact on the economy of the southern US before the Civil War was the cotton gin. Invented by Eli Whitney in 1793, the cotton gin revolutionized the cotton industry by automating the process of removing seeds from cotton fibers. This boosted cotton production and made it more profitable for southern planters, solidifying the region's dependence on slave labor and leading to the expansion of cotton plantations.
Yes. Slave gangs did most of the laying of track in the South.