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Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Squatters, now dubbed sand hillers, clay-eaters, and white trash, were represented as people of the Southern states. Characterized as a distinct racial breed, these impoverished individuals were described as ragged, emaciated, and having ingrained physical defects and yellowish skin. They were said to eat dirt and imbibe excessively in alcohol. To Northerners, these products of indentured servitude proved the negative consequences of slavery. As the nation extended westward, Northerners feared the spread of this distinct class. For that reason, those in the Free Soil party sought to contain slavery.
In this period, elite Americans became obsessed with bloodlines and imagined that good breeding would be “an increasingly important weapon” in the country’s “imperial arsenal” (143) to claim the western lands for the “superior” (138) Anglo-Saxons. People were equated with horses and encouraged to be mindful of breeding. The reality in places such as Texas and California was very different from such imaginings. For example, large numbers of poor white people migrated to California during the Gold Rush. Elites described these miners similarly to the Southern poor. Equated with trash or rubbish, they were loathed and described as the lowest form of life, with a lineage tracing back to the
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