North vs. South
Slavery & Abolition
Expansion
Migration
Random
100

What type of economy did the South rely on?

Agriculture/farming

100

What was the main goal of abolitionists?

To end slavery

100

What was Texas before becoming a U.S. state?

An independent nation

100

What is a push factor?

Something that forces people to leave

100

What invention made cotton production faster?

The cotton gin

200

What type of economy did the North rely on?

Industry/manufacturing

200

Name one abolitionist.

Frederick Douglass (or William Lloyd Garrison, Harriet Tubman)

200

How did Texas become part of the U.S.?

Annexation (joined the U.S.)

200

What is a pull factor?

Something that attracts people

200

What was the Underground Railroad?

A secret network helping enslaved people escape

300

What labor system did the South rely on?

Enslaved labor

300

What did the Fugitive Slave Act require?

Return of escaped enslaved people

300

Why did annexing Texas upset Mexico?

Mexico still claimed Texas

300

Give an example of a push factor.

War, famine, lack of jobs

300

True or False: Texas was always part of the U.S.

False

400

What natural resources did the North depend on from the South?

Cotton

400

Who was Frederick Douglass?

Formerly enslaved abolitionist speaker/writer

400

Why was annexing Texas complicated?

It involved incorporating an independent nation, which led to slavery debates and conflicts with Mexico

400

Give an example of a pull factor.

Jobs, land, freedom

400

 Name one job that Harriet Tubman had during her lifetime

Conductor on the Underground Railroad, nurse, spy, cook

500

How did the invention of the cotton gin tie the North and South together? 

Increased the cotton output, made the entire country reliant on the institution of slavery

500

Why did people fear abolition?

It could divide the country and lead to war

500

What was a major result of annexing Texas?

Mexican-American War

500

What type of factor is the Trail of Tears an example of? 

Push Factor

500

Explain how the invention of the cotton gin changed the economic conditions for plantation owners in the early 1800s.

Increased slavery in the United States due to the decrease in processing time for cotton.

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