it was used as a dye...
-------------
mARzs sez..:
Indigo was a highly-valued crop in British colonial Florida. One of the oldest and most-durable of dyes..
it was used as a dye...
-------------
mARzs sez..:
Indigo was a highly-valued crop in British colonial Florida. One of the oldest and most-durable of dyes..
Used to make blue dye that was used in the cloth making process. 👌hope it helps
Cotton
In the period between 1600 and 1700, the south shifted from simple farming, and planting a variety of plants, to cash crop farming. Cash crops like tobacco, rice, and indigo proved very profitable for southern planters, who acquired more and more slaves and land to take advantage of the crops. At the time, cotton had not yet been introduced, and there was no way of knowing what a huge cash crop it would eventually became.
The southeners, because they used slaves for their main cash crop.
Economy based on a single crop, such as bananas, sugarcone or cacao.
An economy based on one crop.
I do not no i just want to do this
It was used as dye for jeans.
it helped them die the cloths they made
Yes it was, it was one of the things the economy was based on
it was used as a dye...-------------mARzs sez..:Indigo was a highly-valued crop in British colonial Florida. One of the oldest and most-durable of dyes..
The main cash crops were tabacco, indigo, corn, rice, and cotton.
Rice was not a cash crop for the southern colonies but tobacco, indigo, and corn wheat were. In addition, perhaps the biggest cash crop grown in the southern colonies was cotton. The South grew to rely so heavily on cotton and the money it generated that it began to direct their society, leading to the Southern dependence on slavery.
indigo
By using it as a dye in the making of clothes
The South was a cash crop economy of cotton and tobacco.
The main cash crops were rice, tobacco, and indigo. However, the biggest cash crop for the southern colonies would be cotton, and it remained the biggest cash crop until the American Civil War.
The South was a cash crop economy of cotton and tobacco.