Slavery in Cotton King State During the American Revolutionary War and the Civil War, the Americas experienced different socio-political and cultural environmental conditions. With abolition and the emergence of women's rights, the north became a powerful industrial and manufacturing force, the south became a cotton kingdom, and its labor force was born of slavery (Spark pointed out 2011). The uniqueness of Cotton King is that her activities are blessed by slave labor.
The increase in cotton and the accompanying rise in the global status of the United States made the southern slavery. Without slavery, there may not be thousands of acres or millions of dollars worth of cotton kingdom or raw material to be mass produced. In fact, cotton grows up in slavery. They went hand in hand. The existence of slavery and its importance to the South's economy has become a decisive factor in the so-called slave south. Even though slavery arrived in America long before cotton became a beneficial product, there are ethical and economic reasons for the use and purchase of slaves, the continued existence of slavery, and the extinction of this practice before the end of the civil war Even the urgency to protect was obtained. Economic, social and cultural growth accompanying the new life and its success with the rise of cotton
The political and economic foundation of the cotton kingdom was established for the invention of Cotton Jin in 1793, the end of the slave trade in 1808, and the expansion of slavery in the former Southwest part after 1815. Slavery is unconsciously like a huge glacier spreading on the land, crushing resistant rocks on the way and changing the whole social and cultural landscape. Nobody is affected in the presence of the south. Only a devastating civil war can release black people from bondage, even completely change the land characterized by natural beauty and human tragedy.