Yes. That's where their cotton wealth came from.
The primary crop of most South Carolina plantations was cotton. Plantations in South Carolilna's many swampy areas grew rice and indigo as their major crops.
Rubber tree plantations in South Vietnam seemed to be as common as shopping malls in California.
Plantations in the colonies made a lot of the (later) cotton, peanuts, and other crops that needed the South's warm climate to grow.
North had more factories, the South had more Cotton Plantations.
Large farms in South Carolina were known as plantations.
Plantations
Plantations.
Business men would want slaves to work on their plantations. They wouldn't get paid so it was free labour.
it depends what you want but if you want to yes you can grow food in plantations
They were called plantations
Plantations existed more in the south mainly because of the slavery to farm them.
No. Plantations were only in the south and not the middle colonies. They had small cash crop farms.
In the south, they had many plantations. They wanted the slaves to do all the work, whereas the north didn't have plantations, causing them to disagree with slavery
Beaufort South Carolina
The primary crop of most South Carolina plantations was cotton. Plantations in South Carolilna's many swampy areas grew rice and indigo as their major crops.
The middle colonies did have some plantations but not on the scale of the South. They were usually about one third to one half the size of the cotton plantations.
In South Texas