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The 2 main cash crops during the Antebellum period were cotton and rice.
the period before a war. specifically the civil war in the south
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The Antebellum Period in American history is generally the period between the War of 1812 and the US Civil War. However, some historians date this period to be from the adoption of the Constitution in 1789 until the beginning of the Civil War. The term literally means "before the war".
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The ownership of slaves became concentrated in the hands of wealthy plantation owners, leading to a small percentage of the population owning a large number of slaves. This concentration of slave ownership contributed to the economic and social divisions in the antebellum South.
Since the war, historians have called this period Antebellum
Savannah was the capital of Georgia during antebellum period.
The overseer typically managed the plantation house and watched over the house slaves on a Southern plantation during the antebellum period in the United States. This overseer was responsible for supervising the day-to-day operations, ensuring the house slaves performed their duties, and reporting to the plantation owner.
Every period of history creates the conditions that give rise to the next period of history. The antebellum period (antebellum is Latin for before the war) was the period which created the conditions that gave rise to the Civil War, which was an extremely important event.
The time before the war is called the antebellum period.
Every period of history creates the conditions that give rise to the next period of history. The antebellum period (antebellum is Latin for before the war) was the period which created the conditions that gave rise to the Civil War, which was an extremely important event.
The 2 main cash crops during the Antebellum period were cotton and rice.
The antebellum South refers to the period before the American Civil War (1861-1865) in the southern United States. It was characterized by a plantation-based economy that relied heavily on slave labor, especially in the production of cotton. Society in the antebellum South was hierarchical, with a small planter elite at the top and a large enslaved population at the bottom.
Slaves were commonly utilized as field workers in the southern United States during the antebellum period, particularly in states where plantation agriculture like cotton, tobacco, and sugar was prevalent. Plantations in states like Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, and South Carolina relied heavily on enslaved labor for crop cultivation.