Three- field system, Apex
who were in the wealthy class in England before the beginning of the industrial revolution, and what was the basis of thier wealth
Using the seed drill increased use of manuure
After the Agricultural Revolution in England, a common development was the rise of enclosures, where open fields were consolidated into individually owned plots. This shift led to increased agricultural productivity but also displaced many small farmers and laborers, pushing them into urban areas in search of work. As a result, there was a significant growth in cities and the labor force, which contributed to the Industrial Revolution. Additionally, new farming techniques and crop rotation practices emerged, enhancing food production and supporting population growth.
Three Field Rotation
The bourgeoisie (the common folk).
Increased use of manure Using the seed drill three-field system
the poor could no longer collect their firewood from the forests or graze their cattle on the common
agriculture: The Rise of Commercial Agriculture As the Middle Ages waned, increasing communications, the commercial revolution, and the rise of cities in Western Europe tended to turn agriculture away from subsistence farming toward the growing of crops for sale outside the community (commercial agriculture). In Britain the practice of inclosure allowed landlords to set aside plots of land, formerly subject to common rights, for intensive cropping or fenced pasturage, leading to efficient production of single crops. In the 16th and 17th cent. horticulture was greatly developed and contributed to the so-called agricultural revolution.
They were all part of the american revolution and were some of the first colonys.
All but the last one, Woodrow Wilson, who were from old Virginia families that had come to American from England long before the Revolution and prospered as plantation owners. Wilson was also of protestant English ancestry but his parents were not native Virginians and , in fact, his mother was an immigrant, born in England.
In central Canada the agriculture is common and in arctic and urban areas its uncommon.
All in the U.S.A and each part of the southern colonies.