in the plantations slaves done work like, well i don't know, like making i-pads and i-phones.
durr and wasn't it them who invented hair straighteners, wasn't their hair like Afro curls!
any way i think the plantation was cotton mills so cotton picking durr,
Slaves in the plantations were made to work long hours picking crops such as cotton, sugar, and tobacco using hand tools. They were also tasked with planting, cultivating, and processing these crops under harsh and inhumane conditions, often facing abuse and violence from their owners. Additionally, slaves were responsible for maintaining the plantation infrastructure and carrying out various other labor-intensive tasks as demanded by their owners.
The demand for sugarcane as a cash crop in the Americas led to the intense labor needs on plantations, prompting European colonizers to turn to the transatlantic slave trade to meet these demands. This resulted in the forced migration of millions of African slaves to work on sugarcane plantations, forming a crucial aspect of the Atlantic slave trade.
The slave trade increased due to the demand for cheap labor in colonies, particularly in the Americas. European powers established colonies that required large numbers of laborers to work on plantations and in mining operations, leading to the expansion and intensification of the transatlantic slave trade. Economic interests, such as profit from slave labor, drove the growth of the trade.
During the transatlantic slave trade, most slaves were taken from Africa and transported to work on plantations in the Americas, particularly in regions like the Caribbean and the southern United States. Slaves were forced to work in various industries such as sugar, cotton, and tobacco production.
Plantations required a large number of slaves due to the labor-intensive nature of agricultural work like planting, tending, and harvesting crops. The profitability of plantations relied on having a cheap and abundant workforce to cultivate and process the crops for export. Many slaves were needed to provide the necessary labor for large-scale production at plantations.
The slave trade was conducted primarily for economic reasons, to meet the demand for cheap labor in European colonies in the Americas. It also played a crucial role in shaping the global economy and international trade networks during the 16th to 19th centuries. Additionally, racist ideologies and beliefs about the inferiority of African people were used to justify and perpetuate the slave trade.
they were taken to America and the caribbean to work on plantations and etc..
The People working on the Plantations in the Us Benefited from the slave trade because they could then work faster and the slaves were alot cheaper than any othher slaves. This meant there was less work to do.
We saw other countries with slaves and we wanted them to work on the plantations, and to show we had power and wealth.
slave watchers are the owners of slaves that usually work on plantations or mines. There were slaves in latin america, america, and africa.
the slaves had to produce mass number of good work all day and night.
Slave Riders are people that take slaves and trade them to people to work
She was taken captive and forced to work as a slave on the plantation.
because when the atlantic slave trade was around anerica needed slaves to help with work
African slaves were forcibly captured and traded by Europeans to work on plantations and in mines in the Americas. They were seen as property and were sold and transported across the Atlantic as part of the transatlantic slave trade. Their labor and exploitation were central to the economic success of European colonies in the Americas.
The slave trade was a shameful period in world history, but one worth understanding. At its inception this is how the trade worked: The British sent slaves to work on the sugarcane and cotton plantations of North America, the plantations sent sugar, molasses and cotton to Europe where it was turned into rum and textiles, which Europeans traded for African slaves. Later as the Colonies manufacturing capacity increased, and many European nations outlawed the slave trade, New England took on the role that Europe once occupied and began turning the raw materials in to rum and textiles, which it continued to trade with Europe and Africa.
Upon arrival at colonies' slave markets, slaves were inspected for quality and health before being sold to the highest bidder. They were separated from their families, branded or tagged for identification, and forced to work under harsh conditions on plantations or in households. Many endured physical and emotional abuse, as well as a loss of cultural identity and freedom.
The Slave Trade worked in a triangular voyage to the Europeons and to the African American king's and leaders to trade slaves for weaopens and goods and were brought to America to work on the fields