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Cotton shaped an entire world, and two voices captured its extremes. Senator James Henry Hammond boasted that “Cotton is king,” while Frederick Douglass demanded a moral storm to sweep slavery away. Between those poles—economic power and moral protest—lies our story today. We trace how revival fires, women’s activism, and Black abolitionists pushed the movement from cautious reform to immediatism. We examine why many northerners still resisted abolition, how “free soil” politics reframed the debate, and how a global cotton empire fueled southern confidence. Plus, the cultural shockwaves of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and the mounting clashes that followed.
By Zach Garrison, Riley Keltner, and Mike Hill5
2626 ratings
Cotton shaped an entire world, and two voices captured its extremes. Senator James Henry Hammond boasted that “Cotton is king,” while Frederick Douglass demanded a moral storm to sweep slavery away. Between those poles—economic power and moral protest—lies our story today. We trace how revival fires, women’s activism, and Black abolitionists pushed the movement from cautious reform to immediatism. We examine why many northerners still resisted abolition, how “free soil” politics reframed the debate, and how a global cotton empire fueled southern confidence. Plus, the cultural shockwaves of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and the mounting clashes that followed.

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