South Carolina: Pre–Civil War Discontent
Pre–Civil War Discontent
The constitutional amendment known as the “compromise of 1808” somewhat alleviated the sectional antagonism by reapportioning representation. By this time, however, Eli Whitney's cotton gin had enabled cotton plantations to spread far into the up-country; thus the planters continued to dominate state policies. In the late 1820s cotton from the fertile western states glutted the market, and prosperity declined in South Carolina.
Discontent was aggravated by national tariff policies that were unfavorable to South Carolina's agrarian economy. In 1832 the state passed its nullification act, declaring the tariff laws null and void and not binding upon South Carolina citizens. President Andrew Jackson acted firmly for the Union in this crisis, and in 1833 South Carolina repealed its act. Tariff reform that same year brought relief, but the possibility of secession had been broached and was subsequently renewed in reaction to abolitionist attacks and further economic grievances. John C. Calhoun became the acknowledged leader of the whole South with his defense of the states' rights doctrine; his political philosophy was later to form the intellectual basis for the Confederacy. Some of the state's apologists for slavery, notably Robert B. Rhett, equaled the most radical abolitionists in their zeal.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Voting Rights, Desegregation, and Economic Growth
- The Decline of Agriculture and the Rise of Jim Crowism
- Civil War and Reconstruction
- Pre–Civil War Discontent
- The Coming of Revolution
- South Carolina as a Royal Colony
- Life under Proprietary Rule
- French, Spanish, and English Colonization
- Government, Politics, and Higher Education
- Economy
- Geography
- Facts and Figures
- Bibliography
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