answersLogoWhite

0

The South illegally imported slaves from Africa after 1808 because the South did not care what the government said they could or could not do. This was because the idea of scession was forming on the basis that the government was abusing their power as states to determine whether or not they could own slaves. They figured that if they were going to break away from the United States that there would be no reason to obey them.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about General History

If the slave trade was banned in the US how did slavery still thrive?

It was only the international slave trade which was banned after 1808. After that time it was illegal to import any new slaves from Africa. Domestic slave trading, within the US, was still perfectly legal. All children born to slave mothers were also slaves, so there was a source of more slaves in this natural increase. Some illegal importation also continued. Men in this trade, called "blackbirders", often landed slaves in Mexico or Texas. Texas did not become a part of the US until 1845. From Mexico or Texas the illegally imported slaves could be brought overland into the US.


How many slave states were there?

There were49,Because one of the states was Free


Were Missouri and Kentucky free slave states in 1863?

The Proclamation applied only in ten states that were still in rebellion in 1863, thus it did not cover the nearly 500,000 slaves in the slave-holding border states (Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland or Delaware) which were Union states - those slaves were freed by separate state and federal actions.


Why did slave states hate tariffs?

The slave states hated the tariffs more than other states because slaves could have tariffs on their lives. A slave that originally sold for 100 gold would sell for up to 150 with the tax.


How did slave labor make the southern colonies more profitable?

The southern states had more farms and on the farms worked slaves and the farmers made money off of selling the slaves and the slave's labor.

Related Questions

What was the trade slave compromise?

The slave trade compromise was an agreement during the Constitutional Convention of 1787, protecting the interests of slaveholders, that forbid Congress the power to act on the slave trade for twenty years. This meant that slaves would be mostly a state power.


Why did Abraham Lincoln make it illegal to have slaves in the US?

The first slave arrived in 1609 with the start of colonies, but the issue of slavery was always around. The northeastern states outlawed the import of slaves by 1640, but a child born into slavery was a slave. With the invention of the cotton gin the need for slaves grew in the plantation system through the 1860's. With the civil war and the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments of the constitution slavery was finally outlawed in 1867. The import of slaves was mainly an economic issue and it was cheaper to not import than to use the slaves that were born into the system.


If the slave trade was banned in the US how did slavery still thrive?

It was only the international slave trade which was banned after 1808. After that time it was illegal to import any new slaves from Africa. Domestic slave trading, within the US, was still perfectly legal. All children born to slave mothers were also slaves, so there was a source of more slaves in this natural increase. Some illegal importation also continued. Men in this trade, called "blackbirders", often landed slaves in Mexico or Texas. Texas did not become a part of the US until 1845. From Mexico or Texas the illegally imported slaves could be brought overland into the US.


What required people in all states to help slave owners catch their runaway slaves?

The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 required all states to help slave owners recapture their runaway slaves, even if those states did not practice slavery. This law allowed slave owners to pursue escaped slaves into free states and required citizens to assist in their capture.


How might African American in the free states to the closest to the south be affected by the growing slaves in the States near them?

African Americans in free states near the South might experience increased discrimination, threats to their freedom, and heightened surveillance as slave populations grew in nearby states. They may also face the risk of being captured and illegally sold into slavery due to the Fugitive Slave Law, which required their return to slave states if caught.


What were the interests of slave holding states?

they didn't freed slaves


What amendment prohibited the southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves?

Amendment 14 prohibited the Southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves.


Which amendment prohibited the southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves?

Amendment 14 prohibited the Southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves.


Which amendment prohibited the southern states from paying former's slave owners for the loss of their slaves?

Amendment 14 prohibited the Southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves.


What amendment prohibited the southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss their slaves?

Amendment 14 prohibited the Southern states from paying former slave owners for the loss of their slaves.


What country in Latin America was the first to import slaves?

Portugal did, as it opened the first slave market in Europe in 1441. After conquering the Americas, many indigenous people died of smallpox and other European-brought diseases. Due to a lack of slave labor, Portugal and Spain started to 'import' slaves from Africa.


What happened because slave owners feared resistance by slaves Apex answer?

states passed slave codes.