Source: James Henry Hammond, letter to Thomas Clarkson, 1845.
"I go further, and maintain that, as [slavery] exists with us, it is a society containing the fewest elements of conflict, and the most of stability and order, of any that the world has ever seen... We are not only undisturbed by those threats of social revolution which are beginning to make the foundations of European and Northern society totter, but we are absolutely exempt from those minor domestic agitations which are so constantly occurring there."
Which of the following historical developments during the first half of the nineteenth century best explains the "domestic agitations" in Northern society referenced by Hammond in the excerpt?
- The growth of an industrial working class and subsequent labor tensions resulting from the Market RevolutionCevap
- BThe replacement of Northern industrial wage laborers with indentured servants bound by long-term labor contracts
- CThe emergence of Southern industrial factories that outcompeted Northern textile mills
- DThe economic isolation of Northern urban areas from Western agricultural markets
Cevap
The growth of an industrial working class and subsequent labor tensions resulting from the Market Revolution
The correct answer is correct because the Market Revolution in the first half of the nineteenth century led to the growth of factory cities and a distinct wage-earning working class in the North. This economic shift created new social classes and labor tensions, including strikes and early union organizing, which Southern defenders of slavery like Hammond pointed to as signs of social instability in free-labor societies.
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Anahtar Kavram
The contrast between the Southern cotton-based slave economy and Northern industrialization, along with the defense of slavery as a stabilizing social force compared to Northern labor tensions.
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