There were insufficient numbers of Native Americans to work the plantations, especially after the waves of diseases eliminated vast swathes of the population. Africans were considered capable of performing intense labor and they were easily "enslavable" because African kings were more than willing to trade away captured enemies for iron, gold, and European manufactures.
Plantation owners turned to Africans for a labor force due to the Atlantic slave trade providing a ready supply of enslaved laborers, who were seen as expendable and could be controlled through violence and exploitation. Africans were also considered more resistant to diseases prevalent in the Americas compared to Indigenous populations.
Plantation owners turned to enslaved Africans as a labor force due to the demand for cheap and plentiful workers for labor-intensive crops such as sugar and tobacco. Additionally, the transatlantic slave trade provided a ready and steady supply of enslaved Africans to meet the labor needs of the plantations.
Plantation owners turned to enslaved Africans as a labor force due to their need for cheap and abundant labor to work on the large plantations. Enslaved Africans were seen as a profitable and easily controlled source of labor that could be exploited for economic gain. The transatlantic slave trade provided a constant supply of enslaved people to meet the labor demands of the plantations.
Plantation owners sought to enslave Africans for labor due to the demand for cheap and abundant labor to work in the fields. The transatlantic slave trade provided a steady supply of enslaved Africans to meet this demand, allowing plantation owners to maximize their profits from crops like sugar, cotton, and tobacco. The system of slavery also provided social, economic, and political power to the plantation owners.
because the Native Americans were dying so they turned to the enslaved Africans to work the farms
European plantation owners wanted to use enslaved Africans as workers due to their cheap labor costs, physical endurance for field work, and perceived immunity to tropical diseases compared to indigenous populations. This exploitation of enslaved Africans allowed plantation owners to maximize their profits in the burgeoning industries of sugar, tobacco, and cotton.
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The plantation owners had very cheap labor
cotton plantation owners needed a large labor force
Cotton plantations in the South (field work) and also to be house servants in the wealthy plantation owners' houses.
One advantage of having indentured servants for plantation owners was that they could increase their profit margin. The plantation owners had very cheap labor.
Slaves were brought to America to farm tobacco on plantations.
Slavery made the plantation owners rich. Africans were a great source of cheap labor. However they were treated horribly.http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ism/slavery/archaeology/caribbean/
One advantage of having indentured servants for plantation owners was that they could increase their profit margin. The plantation owners had very cheap labor.
because the Native Americans were dying so they turned to the enslaved Africans to work the farms
To get big profits, to maintain slavery -i. e. get work force free.
Because they felt like it.