Question
year: Number of slaves:
1790 697,897
1800 893,041
1810 1,191,364
1820 1,539,038
1830 2,009,050
1840 2,487,455
1850 3,204,313
1860 3,953,760
use the chart to answer the question.
Based on the chart, how did westward expansion affect slavery in the United States between 1820 and 1850?
a the slave population roughly doubled as several new slave states were admitted to the Union
b the slave population decreased as the U.S. economy became less dependent on agriculture
c the slave population remained roughly the same as the new states admitted to the Union were largely free
d the slave population remained roughly the same but its percentage of the total population skyrocketed
1790 697,897
1800 893,041
1810 1,191,364
1820 1,539,038
1830 2,009,050
1840 2,487,455
1850 3,204,313
1860 3,953,760
use the chart to answer the question.
Based on the chart, how did westward expansion affect slavery in the United States between 1820 and 1850?
a the slave population roughly doubled as several new slave states were admitted to the Union
b the slave population decreased as the U.S. economy became less dependent on agriculture
c the slave population remained roughly the same as the new states admitted to the Union were largely free
d the slave population remained roughly the same but its percentage of the total population skyrocketed
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Based on the chart, the correct answer is:
**a) the slave population roughly doubled as several new slave states were admitted to the Union.**
The data shows a significant increase in the number of slaves from 1820 (1,539,038) to 1850 (3,204,313), indicating that westward expansion and the admission of new slave states contributed to this growth in the slave population.
**a) the slave population roughly doubled as several new slave states were admitted to the Union.**
The data shows a significant increase in the number of slaves from 1820 (1,539,038) to 1850 (3,204,313), indicating that westward expansion and the admission of new slave states contributed to this growth in the slave population.