first, the question should read "REVOLUTION" and it was the European textile industry's desire for US Southern Cotton.
The demand for rice,indigo,tobacco, and cotton.
I was looking for the answer..i dnt wanna answer it..!
I was looking for the answer..i dnt wanna answer it..!
There was an economic crisis in England. Americans would export their cotton to England in return for manufactured cotton textiles. Because the English economy was in trouble, cotton prices dropped in America (the demand of American imports dropped in England).
they had to get more slaves
The increase in demand for cotton in the 1790s was primarily driven by the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney in 1793, which significantly streamlined the process of separating cotton fibers from seeds. Additionally, the expansion of the textile industry in Britain created a greater need for raw cotton, as manufacturers sought to produce more fabric. The combination of these technological advancements and growing industrial needs led to a surge in cotton cultivation in the American South, further entrenching its role as a key cash crop.
Possibly the dependency of slave labor for cotton production that was in high demand. It was cheep and demand was high.
Several things, Cotton was easy to farm, So it was more avaliable,,,, More cotton = More uses,,,, Also there were machines being invented that were processing cotton faster, faster process of cotton = more demand,,,, More demand = more producers,,,, More producers = the demand for better equipment,,,, demand for better equipment = more inventions.,,, In short, its A classic example of one hand fills the other.,, This was fun, Jamison.,,,,,,,,,,,,,If your confused, read it A couple more times, you will get it.
More farmers got the wretched idea to get slaves. It kept spreading farther and farther. The invention of the cotton gin also increased the demand for slaves to work in farms tending and harvesting the cotton.
Most of the cotton produced in the American South after the invention of the cotton gin was sold to Great Britain. The British textile industry relied heavily on American cotton to fuel its production of textiles during the Industrial Revolution. This trade relationship greatly increased the demand for cotton, leading to the expansion of cotton plantations in the South.
By making it inexpensive to process cotton, it increased the demand for cotton, which increased the demand for slaves to grow cotton.
Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, which made cotton harvesting much easier for southern farmers. The ease of growing and harvesting then caused it to become the chief industry of the south, and resulted in the Southern States having a strongly agrarian economy.