The answer is "Sharecropper" or African Americans (or I guess whites too) still working on plantations. :)
Settled in large plantations managed by a single family with the help of slaves
mabye maybe not...:p
planters
They were grown in the Southern Plantations
Large plantations
Many slaves in the south worked on large plantations
Plantations
Most southerners saw slavery as an economic necessity. Slaves worked large plantations all throughout the south. These plantations depended on this cheap/free labor to keep overhead costs down.
Plantations were large farms Found chiefly
Plantations.
The region of LARGE southern plantations was called the "Black Belt"
plantations and large family farms
Yes, in the antebellum South, many regions were divided into large farm lands called plantations that primarily cultivated cash crops such as cotton, tobacco, rice, and sugar cane. These plantations were worked by enslaved African Americans and were owned by wealthy landowners who controlled the production and labor on the estates.
Large Roman plantations were called latifundia and were often worked by slaves or tenant farmers. These plantations produced crops like grain, olives, and grapes using advanced agricultural techniques. The dominance of latifundia contributed to the decline of small farms and the growth of wealth inequality in Roman society.
yes, people in Georgia did have small farms and large plantations.
In Ecuador, you can find plantations as large as 500 has. Highly technical, most of the have irrigation .
Hawaii is the Pacific state known for having large sugar plantations, although most of these plantations have been phased out in recent years.