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Feb 11, 2011: Map of US slavery
http://cellar.org/2011/cwslavesm.jpg
Shown here is the percentage of the population that were slaves in the 1860 census. The darkest (!) counties shown are above 80% slaves. It's even more impressive shown here as a huge image that you can zoom around on. |
Interesting how slavery follows the Mississippi river and is centered around the cities in a lot of places. I suppose only the wealthy could afford to own slaves, and the wealth was near the cities.
I always thought of slavery as being centered around rural agriculture, but this map shows that was not necessarily always the case. |
Land in the Mississippi Delta was cheap (Gov't wanted people to settle there after it had been purchased from the French) and proved to be incredibly fertile. They needed a lot of labor to clear the land and make it profitable.
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Interesting that by 1850 it is estimated that 100,000 slaves (cite) had escaped via the Underground Railroad. My town was a noted stop...I know of one house in town that people say was a stop.
Old maps are so cool. I look at my parent's old globe and everything has changed. There isn't a huge area called U.S.S.R. anymore, for instance. UR map: |
Thanks for the link UT! Very interesting.
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It's not citues, it commercial farming.
Quote:
Along the river is flat land that is usually good for farming. With ready transportation by barge it would be ideal commercial farming of rice and cotton. |
I was thinking the same thing hampor.
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