It was strictly agricultural
It went from a great power to an isolationist nation, much like Japan
Georgia's agricultural economy depended on trade.
The early southern colonies depended heavily on agriculture. They grew wheat and other food and also tobacco, which they could sell in order to get the cash needed to buy fabric, tools and everything else that couldn't be grown.
In the 1990s and early 2000s the Celtic Tiger was a nickname for Ireland's economy, but not Ireland itself. So there was no special nickname in the 1990s, just the traditional nicknames for Ireland like The Emerald Isle.
Like the rest of the Southern colonies, Georgia had an economy based on: *hunting *fishing *farming - lots of farming because of good soil, and longer growing periods *whaling *shipbuilding
Railroads helped the economy because when people took the railroads to work, across to another state, or anything like that it was equivalent to carpooling.
This was bacause the south mostly relied on agriculture at this time. The south focused their economy mostly on things like cotton and other southern crops.
Suck a cox
The US wasnt too far advanced yet in the early 1800s. Most of the advancements in the early 1800s like anaestesia, and antiseptic surgery were done by Englishmen and other advancements like germ theory was put forth by the frenchman Louis Pasteur.
bad
the people in the 1800s wore things like whool and homegrown cotton hope this could help!!
I am not sire what the economy is but its main job is to bring the northern and southern half of the region together as one.
To put it plainly it was OK. It was black and white and many old people that had the plague died...
slavery benefited the southern economy because raised a lot of money for the slave owners,especially when the slaves get extra jobs,because all of the money the earned goes straight to their owner. :(
It went from a great power to an isolationist nation, much like Japan
Yes, people used contractions just like we use. They were not as common in informal speech and writing as they are today.
Vermont, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio were added to the U.S.