Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Effect Slavery Had Upon American South From Colonial Times To 1877. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. The writer discusses how blacks and whites coped with and cultural changed because of the institution of slavery. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCslavefft.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the growth of the black slave labor system, it was clear that this progression only served to worsen the situation. After the Civil War, the Souths environmental and economic
condition was impoverished. Plantations and railroads had been destroyed, farming and business had come to a standstill, and entire cities were burned down. The white population was spiritually
devastated and the masses were uneasy about what lay ahead. Newly emancipated slaves wandered the South in search of their loved ones separated from them during slavery and/or the
war. Their economic condition after the Civil War was just as uncertain. As the war raged on, black cotton farmers were looking forward to a Northern victory, which
would ultimately give them their freedom; however, if the South were to win, those in the Confederate states would succumb to the ongoing imprisonment of slavery. Clearly, the white
man did not want to part with all the money the black farmers were making for them, which is why they fought so hard to make sure slavery continued.
African life was a seamless web, forever moving from one generation to another all the while upholding traditional culture and faith as a means
by which to survive. Clearly, black men and American culture have long existed as a synergistic force - the more that blacks did for the whites, the better off
white became for the black mans efforts. Assimilating into the white mans culture was not an option: if the black community was to persevere, it had to adapt and
become part of the seamless web. The extent to which African-Americans lost their entire culture and identity in the after-effects of the slave trade speaks to the slow and
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