Slavery was not really in the north. It was in the south. For ex. Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and in Georgia.
Yes, there were differences between the North and South in terms of rural and urban areas. The North was more industrialized and urbanized, with cities like New York and Philadelphia leading in manufacturing and trade. In contrast, the South was more rural and agrarian, with a reliance on plantation farming, particularly in cotton and tobacco.
False
The region of York is both Urban and Rural, depending on what part is in context
A green State like missipippi and New York, South and north Carolina :)
Most Southern states, such as Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina, and Virginia, had slaves before the abolition of slavery in the United States. Some Northern states, like New York and New Jersey, also had slaves, but slavery was not as widespread in the North as it was in the South.
New York City is about as urban as it gets. There are no rural communities within the city. You have to travel quite a way from New York City before you get to any community that could be considered rural.
they felt about slavery
Slavery was illegal in the northern states of the United States, including states like Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania. Slavery was legal in the southern states, such as South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama.
they abolished slavery in the northern united states in 1861 and in the southern united states slavery was abolished in 1865.
1
New York never used slavery because the winters there are too harsh to grow cash crops.
no