Indentured servants and slaves. indentured servants weren't exactly slaves some often lived with their masters. they also schooled their masters children when the mother or father were busy. The slaves slept in thrown together shacks and were forced to work. some would try to escape but if you were caught it was punishable by death.
In the ante-bellum South, slave labor was the basis for the agricultural economy, and it made plantation owners very rich.
Cotton plantations in the South (field work) and also to be house servants in the wealthy plantation owners' houses.
labor shortages, slavery and cash crops led to the development of the Plantation system.
cotton plantation owners needed a large labor force
Cheap free labor was the only way of producing cotton - and lots of it. Following the invention of the cotton gin, cotton become "king" in the South, comprising a majority of its exports. Without slavery, cotton could not be harvested, and the large plantation holders would surely be in ruins. Though the owners of huge plantations did not amass to a majority in the South, they were the political leaders and drove the economy. For the economic and political success of both the South and the plantation owners, the institution of slavery had to continue.
The plantation owners had very cheap labor
One advantage of having indentured servants for plantation owners was that they could increase their profit margin. The plantation owners had very cheap labor.
In the ante-bellum South, slave labor was the basis for the agricultural economy, and it made plantation owners very rich.
Gago and tanga
Many plantation owners in the South moved toward a one crop economy (cotton) and needed a cheaper labor source than the Northern idea of white labor.
One advantage of having indentured servants for plantation owners was that they could increase their profit margin. The plantation owners had very cheap labor.
Because they felt like it.
the plantation owners wanted more labor, thus bringing in more slaves because the plantation owners wanted free labor, so they can earn more money
Cotton plantations in the South (field work) and also to be house servants in the wealthy plantation owners' houses.
Plantation owners supported and propagated racism to justify owning people as slaves.
The labor system of slaver transformed the South during the eighteenth century because a slave labor made the agricultural industry extremely profitable in the south. A slave earned no wages and was fed the remnants and scraps not consumed by the rich plantation owners.
Slave labor dominated the rice plantation economy, with enslaved people forced to work long hours in harsh conditions to cultivate and harvest rice. This economic system thrived on the exploitation and dehumanization of enslaved individuals, who faced severe punishments and deprivation of basic rights. The profits generated from this system were built on the backs of enslaved laborers, perpetuating a cycle of oppression and inequality.