1:00
en
CR
The South and the Slavery Controversy
21
Cotton : What became the staple crop between 1793-1860?
Oligarchy : Term for a government in which a small group exercise control especially for corrupt and selfish purposes.
Breakers : Slave drivers who employed the lash to brutally "break" the souls of strong, willed slaves.
Republic of Liberia : This settlement was established in 1822 for former slaves.
Cotton gin : What invention in 1793 reintroduced the idea of slavery.
South : This section of America created more than half of the entire world's cotton supply.
William T Johnson : This freed black was the master of 15 bondsmen.
West Africa Squadron : This Royal Navy group seized hundreds of slave ships and freed thousands of grateful captives.
Amistad : Spanish slave ship dramatically seized off the coast of Cuba by the enslaved Africans on board.
Liberator : Anti-Slavery newspaper published in Boston by William Lloyd Garrison.
Mountain Whites : Name given to the lower class of whites who hated the cotton "snobocracy".
New Orleans : City where many blacks owned property and slaves.
Frederick Douglass : Well known abolitionist who was often compared by differences with William Lloyd Garrison.
Britain : abolished the slave trade in 1807 ( but not slavery itself).
Slave Auction : Brutal events in which slaves were sold, often being seperated from their families.
Harriet Beecher Stowe : Female abolitionist known for writing "Uncle Tom's Cabin".
Responsorial : This type of preaching was created by the African Americans.
Gabriel : This slave led an armed insurrection in 1800 in Richmond, Virginia.
John Quincy Adams : this former president was responsible for the freeing of the captives of the Amistad.
Sierra Leone : Slaves of the Amistad was returned to this British colony in West Africa.
Nat Turner : led a violent slave uprising in 1831 that sent a wave of hysteria sweeping over the cotton fields.
Abolitionist : People who fought to stop slavery.
The South and the Slavery Controversy
Across:| 2. | Term for a government in which a small group exercise control especially for corrupt and selfish purposes. | | 3. | Anti-Slavery newspaper published in Boston by William Lloyd Garrison. | | 10. | This slave led an armed insurrection in 1800 in Richmond, Virginia. | | 13. | This settlement was established in 1822 for former slaves. | | 16. | Spanish slave ship dramatically seized off the coast of Cuba by the enslaved Africans on board. |
| | 17. | Slaves of the Amistad was returned to this British colony in West Africa. | | 18. | What became the staple crop between 1793-1860? | | 19. | led a violent slave uprising in 1831 that sent a wave of hysteria sweeping over the cotton fields. | | 20. | Slave drivers who employed the lash to brutally "break" the souls of strong, willed slaves. | | 21. | This type of preaching was created by the African Americans. |
| | Down:| 1. | This freed black was the master of 15 bondsmen. | | 4. | What invention in 1793 reintroduced the idea of slavery. | | 5. | Female abolitionist known for writing "Uncle Tom's Cabin". | | 6. | Name given to the lower class of whites who hated the cotton "snobocracy". | | 7. | this former president was responsible for the freeing of the captives of the Amistad. | | 8. | Well known abolitionist who was often compared by differences with William Lloyd Garrison. |
| | 9. | Brutal events in which slaves were sold, often being seperated from their families. | | 11. | This section of America created more than half of the entire world's cotton supply. | | 12. | People who fought to stop slavery. | | 14. | abolished the slave trade in 1807 ( but not slavery itself). | | 15. | City where many blacks owned property and slaves. |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
The South and the Slavery Controversy
Across:| 2. | Term for a government in which a small group exercise control especially for corrupt and selfish purposes. | | 3. | Anti-Slavery newspaper published in Boston by William Lloyd Garrison. | | 10. | This slave led an armed insurrection in 1800 in Richmond, Virginia. | | 13. | This settlement was established in 1822 for former slaves. | | 16. | Spanish slave ship dramatically seized off the coast of Cuba by the enslaved Africans on board. |
| | 17. | Slaves of the Amistad was returned to this British colony in West Africa. | | 18. | What became the staple crop between 1793-1860? | | 19. | led a violent slave uprising in 1831 that sent a wave of hysteria sweeping over the cotton fields. | | 20. | Slave drivers who employed the lash to brutally "break" the souls of strong, willed slaves. | | 21. | This type of preaching was created by the African Americans. |
| | Down:| 1. | This freed black was the master of 15 bondsmen. | | 4. | What invention in 1793 reintroduced the idea of slavery. | | 5. | Female abolitionist known for writing "Uncle Tom's Cabin". | | 6. | Name given to the lower class of whites who hated the cotton "snobocracy". | | 7. | this former president was responsible for the freeing of the captives of the Amistad. | | 8. | Well known abolitionist who was often compared by differences with William Lloyd Garrison. |
| | 9. | Brutal events in which slaves were sold, often being seperated from their families. | | 11. | This section of America created more than half of the entire world's cotton supply. | | 12. | People who fought to stop slavery. | | 14. | abolished the slave trade in 1807 ( but not slavery itself). | | 15. | City where many blacks owned property and slaves. |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only