slavery was a luxury to the southern because they were to lazy to grow there own tobacco and cotton so they had the slaves do it
To provide much needed labor to farm the lands for cotton and tobacco - to supply the British Empire.
peaches affect Georgia's economy because, Georgia is known as the peach state
The economy in North Carolina in the 1700's was good they had good soil for agriculture. They could grow many crops such as: tobacco, soybeans, corn, cotton, squash, beans, rice, indigo and some more.
The overwhelming majority of slaves were field hands, picking cotton and planting and harvesting rice, tobacco, and sugar cane. The occupational distribution of slaves reflected the nature of the economy and society of the South.
The South was a cash crop economy of cotton and tobacco.
timber,tobacco and cotton
Cotton and tobacco.
Yes
The South was a cash crop economy of cotton and tobacco.
it was relying on the indian slave trade and plantations like rice and tobacco and indigo and cotton.
North Carolina grows a wide range of crops--from corn and other vegetables to cotton. It is very often associated with growing tobacco, which it does in abundance. It is one of the top three states for tobacco and cotton, but nearly any crop that can be grown east of the Mississippi River will thrive here.
Many people brought cotton, furs and tobacco by river boat to New Orleans.
The invention of the cotton gin allowed for a more efficient method of separating cotton from its seeds. This allowed the South to produce more cotton at a faster rate, thereby increasing its economy and trade.
The economy of the south depended on cotton, which was the largest export of the United States. Tobacco was the #2 crop in most of the south.
The economy of the US Southern States was based on agriculture. Cotton and tobacco were the main crops for decades, including colonial America to the present.
The key industry is agriculture, based on cotton. Also, millet, corn, vegetables, tobacco, gold and livestock