ChatterBank1 min ago
History Question
1 Answers
the ways in which tobacco and sugar affected the social and ecnonmic development of colonial America?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by parrisha09. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Along ith indigo, tobacco was a major cash crop of colonial times, grown for export to England. The 'tidewater aristiocracy' of Virginia rose on those two crops. By late colonial times they had depleted the soil.there and were increasingly grown 'out west'.
Sugar was more an import from the caribbean islands where it was the prime crop. Molasses and rum-making were related industries, agian for export.
The labor-intensity of tobacco farming, as well as the fact that it could be grown on relatively marginal lland meant that it was cropped by small farmers as opposed to plantation owners. Most tobacco farming occurred in the southern states and engendered the lifestyle that now is described by the derogatory term 'cracker'.
Sugar was more an import from the caribbean islands where it was the prime crop. Molasses and rum-making were related industries, agian for export.
The labor-intensity of tobacco farming, as well as the fact that it could be grown on relatively marginal lland meant that it was cropped by small farmers as opposed to plantation owners. Most tobacco farming occurred in the southern states and engendered the lifestyle that now is described by the derogatory term 'cracker'.