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  1. The pre–Civil War years (1820–1860, or the “antebellum years”) were among the most chaotic in American history—a time of significant changes that took place as the United States came of age. During these years, the nation was transformed from an underdeveloped nation of farmers and frontiersmen into an urbanized economic powerhouse.

  2. Antebellum Era. The Historic Documents in this set cover the period from 1791 to 1860. During this period, the American people began their experiment in republican self-government under the U.S. Constitution. Over time, sectional divisions widened over the issue of slavery—culminating in the election of President Abraham Lincoln, Southern ...

  3. Free blacks in the antebellum period—those years from the formation of the Union until the Civil War—were quite outspoken about the injustice of slavery. Their ability to express themselves, however, was determined by whether they lived in the North or the South.

  4. An understanding of the roughly four decades preceding the start of the Civil War, the Antebellum Period, is essential to understanding the war itself. The federal capital at Washington was highly valued as a symbol by 19 th century Americans. Carefully laid out in a district allocated from within the boundaries of Maryland in order to salve ...

  5. Aug 21, 2020 · The Antebellum Period was a time of tremendous economic growth in America thanks to the agricultural dominance in the South and the textile booms in the North. But this wealth was largely powered by the suffering of millions of enslaved African Americans who endured torture at the hands of white slaveholders, especially in the Deep South.

  6. In the antebellum era—that is, in the years before the Civil War—American planters in the South continued to grow Chesapeake tobacco and Carolina rice as they had in the colonial era. Cotton, however, emerged as the antebellum South’s major commercial crop, eclipsing tobacco, rice, and sugar in economic importance.

  7. Antebellum communal experiments. Prior to 1815, in the years before the market and Industrial Revolution, most Americans lived on farms where they produced much of the foods and goods they used. This largely pre-capitalist culture centered on large family units whose members all lived in the same towns, counties, and parishes.

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