black people
The work in tobacco fields were done by African slaves or indentured servants.
Work in tobacco fields was done by either African Slaves or indentured servants.
A typical tobacco plantation would use 100 slaves to work the fields. The south had over 2,320,000 slaves that was over 47 percent of its total population.
To work on tobacco fields for plantation owners.
To work on tobacco fields for plantation owners.
Virginia
Tobacco Fields
Work in the fields of Ancient Egypt was mainly done by the peasant farmers. On the estates of the nobles and the temple the work was often done by slaves.
Tobacco! then later they done the cotton
In Jamestown, much of the work in the fields and on the farms was done by indentured servants and later by enslaved Africans. Indentured servants were individuals who exchanged their labor for passage to the New World and eventual freedom, while enslaved Africans were forcibly brought to the colony and made to work under harsh conditions. These laborers played a crucial role in the agricultural economy of Jamestown, cultivating crops such as tobacco that were essential to the colony's survival and growth.
The increase of work that needed to be done on tobacco plantations.
A messor was the village official responsible for the work done in the fields.