30. Why did the rise of the market revolution and westward expansion make life worse for African–Americans?
a. The rise of the Cotton Kingdom reduced legal slavery dramatically, and slave trading became an
underground business in which traders forced enslaved people to march to the Deep South.
b. When traders and owners moved enslaved people west, they destroyed family ties and long-standing
communities.
c. The decline in slavery meant that free blacks were forced to find their own source of income, which they
had no experience doing.
d. Federal law barred free blacks from skilled job opportunities.
e. Travel fees grew too expensive for black families to afford finding economic opportunity in the West.
31. What was a slave coffle?
a. a small uprising of slaves
b. a group of escaped slaves traveling together
c. the minimum price per head for a slave at auction
d. slaves chained together on forced marches to the Lower South
e. small one-room homes provided for each slave family by plantation owners
32. What was the most common means of acquiring slaves to work on newly established cotton plantations in the
Lower South?
a. illegally importing them from the West Indies
b. through births to existing slaves
c. capturing and returning to slavery communities of escaped slaves in Florida
d. purchasing them from Spanish landowners in the territory that would become Texas
e. purchasing them at auction in cities such as Mobile, Natchez, and New Orleans
33. Which is an example of how farming changed in America between 1800 and 1840?
a. Cyrus McCormick’s reaper made possible a boom in cotton production.
b. Farmers in the Old Northwest increasingly relied on slave labor.