Irrigation and the cotton gin.
in 2002 demand for domestic cotton increased more than 3 million bales, reaching 18.7 million bales
more cotton plantations were needed just took this on apex
The invention of the cotton gin in 1793 increased demand forh slaves. Cotton was hand picked those days and cotton needed. The transatlantic slave trade reached its peak between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries spurred by the growth of large plantations in North and South America.
The Cotton Gin invented by Eli Whitney. The Cotton Gin removed seeds from cotton, which made Cotton, (which has a lot of seeds in it), a very valuable product. Before the Cotton Gin, it took a long time to remove seeds from cotton, with the C. G., the removal seeds took a short time, and the cotton could be used for clothing and other products.
Slaves had been around before, but the invention of the cotton gin majorly increased the demand for slaves in the southern states.
By making it inexpensive to process cotton, it increased the demand for cotton, which increased the demand for slaves to grow cotton.
the machine thAT increased the demand for slaves was the cotton gin
The demand for coal rose because there were more factories to power with their new machines being invented. Also the houses for workers had to be powered. The new machines included things like the steam engine; trains, canal boats and barges ect. Hope it helps!
in 2002 demand for domestic cotton increased more than 3 million bales, reaching 18.7 million bales
The Cotton Gin!
steam-powered machinery
In general, raw materials. For example, cotton and run were in demand. I was told that once cotton could be "bleached" white, its demand heavily increased.
There were more industrial jobs in that region of the country. There was also a lot more business in the ports in the north in order to export the goods made in the mills.
The spinning Jenny was invented in England and the mills needed cotton. The cotton gin had been invented so the south could produce to bales of cotton needed by the mills.
the cotton gin
The invention of the cotton gin in the late 18th century significantly increased the demand for cotton production, which in turn intensified the need for slave labor in the United States. The machine made it easier and faster to separate cotton fibers from seeds, leading to a dramatic expansion of cotton farming. Additionally, the steam engine and industrial revolution increased the demand for raw materials, such as cotton, prompting an even greater reliance on enslaved labor.
The Arab states in North Africa traditionally traded in slaves. But, when the demand for African slaves to work on the cotton and sugar cane plantations in America arose, the demand for slaves increased.