The 3 cash crops in the middle colonies were rice, indigo, and tobacco.
the 2 main cash crops were sugar and tabbaco
Yes I think there were. They had tobacco and stuff like that. The south had indigo...
The staple crops werepeaches, corn,carrots, peas, turnips, onions, tobacco, and wheat
wheat, corn, and livestock
the quickest way to for farmers to repay that dept: cash crops
the 2 main cash crops were sugar and tabbaco
they grew cash crops and food cash crops as tabbaco metal and others
they grew cash crops and food cash crops as tabbaco metal and others
The middle colonies had lots of forests(lumber), grew cash crops, and also lots of bread and were known as the "breadbasket colonies".
Yes I think there were. They had tobacco and stuff like that. The south had indigo...
The northern colonies were rocky soil and couldn't grow much more than small amounts of crops. While the middle colonies had land that could grow cash crops.
Everyone was an immigrant to the colonies. Farmers liked the Middle Colonies because they could grow cash crops.
Iron mining, cash crops were th main sours of money in the middle colonies' economy but there was also fishing, lumbering.
Cash crops that were grown in the Middle Colonies included fruits, vegetables, and grain.
The middle colonies produced the 'Staple Crops' or the food for all the other colonies. Some examples of them would be oats, wheat, barley, etc. The southern colonies provided 'cash crops' to earn money. Examples of cash crops were tobacco, sugar, rice, cotton, etc. The New England colonies also had cash crops.
The key to success in the middle colonies were that they had a lot of rich soil which they could use to grow cash crops and tobacco
Cash crops are important, because they helped the economy. These crops were raised to be sold for money. Common cash crops include fruits, vegetables, and, above all, grain. The Middle Colonies produced so much grain that people began calling them the "breadbasket" colonies. (Source: Creating America: A History of the United States Texas Edition text book)