it was called Tidewater.
The economy of the southern colonies was so dependent because they believed in helping eachother out.
Tobacco plantations.
One of the most important facts about slavery in the South in the antebellum period was that the large Southern plantations depended on slave labor to run them. Because of this dependence, slavery became a fact of life in the South.
C.They put it back into their plantations and bought slaves.
large plantations
Southern colonies had rich soil and warm climate
Southern plantations were large and needed many workers, but most southern colonists lived on small family farms. plantations, but small farms were much more common.
it was called Tidewater.
in the south of the united states
southern plantations
Louisaana
New England
(Most) Southern cities don't enslave black people to pick cotton while on plantations they do.
Most of the early plantations in the Americas were located in areas with fertile soil and a warm climate suitable for cash crops such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton. This included regions like the southern United States, the Caribbean, and parts of Central and South America.
southern colonies
True. In the southern United States, most slaves were forced to work on large plantations, where they were subjected to harsh living and working conditions. This system of forced labor was a central aspect of the antebellum South's economy and society.