Economic & Transportation
Southern Economy
Enslaved Life & Culture
Industrial North
Immigration & Cities
100

This type of fast ship cut travel time between the East Coast and California in the mid-1800s. 

What is a clipper ship? 

100

What was the primary foundation of the Southern economy in the early 1800s?

Agriculture and farming.

100

Typical housing for many enslaved people: small ___ cabins with ___ floors. (fill in the blanks)

 single-room; dirt.

100

What was a major problem factory workers faced in the early 1800s (hint: long hours or conditions)?

 Long working hours with poor, often dangerous working conditions.

100

Which immigrant group came to the U.S. because of the potato famine?

The Irish. 

200

Invented by Rober Fulton, this craft revolutionized river travel and boosted trade on the Mississippi. 

The steamboat. 

200

The invention of the cotton gin (1793) made this crop dominant and earned it a nickname — what was the crop and the nickname?

 Cotton — "King Cotton"

200

 What were common daily working hours for many enslaved laborers?

 From sunrise to sunset.

200

Give two examples of poor living conditions common in rapidly growing Northern cities.

Overcrowded tenements; poor sanitation; limited clean water; disease outbreaks.

200

Name two reasons cities grew rapidly near factories

Job opportunities; transportation hubs; access to markets; proximity to factories.

300

By 1850, about how many miles of railroad track existed in the United States? 

9,000 miles of track by 1850.

300

 List two other important Southern agricultural products besides cotton.

Tobacco; rice; sugar (also hemp, indigo)

300

Name two forms of musical or oral cultural traditions developed by enslaved African Americans

Spirituals, work songs, field hollers; strong oral storytelling traditions.

300

Explain how the rise of factories contributed to urban growth (one to two sentences).

 Factories created many jobs that attracted workers from rural areas and immigrants, concentrating labor and services in cities and stimulating transportation and housing development.

300

Give two effects immigration had on American cities between 1800–1850.

 Increased cultural diversity; growth of the labor force; development of ethnic neighborhoods; introduction of new religions and traditions.

400

This communication invention by Samuel Morse in 1844 connected distant cities almost instantly.

 The telegraph (Morse code).

400

 Explain briefly how the plantation system shaped Southern social hierarchy (one or two sentences).

 Large-scale plantation agriculture concentrated land and wealth in the hands of wealthy planters, creating a social hierarchy with planters at the top and many small farmers and enslaved people below

400

Describe one way enslaved people resisted cultural erasure and preserved community bonds (short answer).

Through oral traditions, secret worship gatherings, music, and family networks that preserved language, stories, and beliefs.

400

Name one reason industrial development was more limited in the South compared to the North.

 The South focused on agriculture and relied on enslaved labor, which reduced incentives for mechanized industry and urban manufacturing growth.

400

Describe what an ethnic neighborhood was and why such neighborhoods developed (one to two sentences).

 Ethnic neighborhoods were city areas where immigrants from the same country or culture concentrated to access mutual support, jobs, language, and cultural institutions

500

Name two farm inventions that increased agricultural productivity and supported westward expansion (one by Cyrus McCormick and one by John Deere).

Mechanical reaper (Cyrus McCormick) and steel plow (John Deere)

500

 Describe two long-term economic effects the Southern export-oriented, slave-based economy had on the United States (short answer

Lasting economic disparities between regions; dependence on Northern manufactured goods and markets; contributed to sectional tensions leading to the Civil War.

500

Provide two hardships of enslaved family life and two ways families or communities tried to cope (brief list).

Hardships: cramped, single-room housing; scarce food and supplies; family separations from sale. Coping: extended kin networks, secret education, communal worship and music.

500

Describe one way industrialization changed the American labor force and one social effect of that change.

 Industrialization shifted many workers from farms to factory labor, introduced wage labor and child labor, and led to urbanization with changes in family structures and social services.

500

Explain how transportation and communication advances connected cities and influenced migration patterns (short answer)

Faster ships, steamboats, railroads, and the telegraph reduced travel time and improved information flow, making migration easier and enabling goods and people to move between regions more quickly.

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