By the early nineteenth century, northern states had either abolished slavery or put it on the road to extinction, while southern states were building the largest slave society in the New World. Regional differences increased over time, not merely because the South became more and more dominated by slavery, but also because developments in the North rapidly propelled it in a very different direction.
By 1860, one-
The South was not merely a society with slaves; it had become a slave society. Slavery shaped the region’s economy, culture, social structure, and politics. Whites south of the Mason-
Many features of southern life helped to confine class tensions among whites: the wide availability of land, rapid economic mobility, the democratic nature of political life, the patriarchal power among all white men, and, most of all, slavery and white supremacy. All stress along class lines did not disappear, however, and anxious slaveholders continued to worry that yeomen would defect from the proslavery consensus. But during the 1850s, white Southerners’ near universal acceptance of slavery would increasingly unite them in political opposition to their northern neighbors.
See the Selected Bibliography for this chapter in the Appendix.