answersLogoWhite

0

Slaves did just about all the physical labor on a tobacco plantation. Growing tobacco is very labor-intensive. The seeds are tiny, and are sprouted in seed beds. Once they are up a little bit they have to be transplanted to the fields. After they grow a little they have to be "suckered" - the top part has to be pinched off so they will be bushy. They have to be hoed, to keep the soil loose, and weeded. They they had to be harvested, by hand. Once harvested, they had to be cured. This usually involved pushing a sharp stick through the base of the stalk of plants, so a number were on the stick, hanging upside down. Then the sticks were hung up in a curing barn. Meanwhile, a "cooper", who was a person who made barrels, was making large "hogshead" barrels to hold the cured plants. These barrels were packed with about 1000 pounds of tobacco. Then these had to be rolled onto a ship at the plantation dock. Lots of work to be done.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Who provided the labor to grow tobacco on PLANTATIONS?

Slaves were the main labor source for large plantations.


What did tobacco plantations have that sugar and cotton plantations didnt?

a larger percentage of female slaves-apex


A difference between tobacco plantations and cotton and sugar plantations was that tobacco plantations had?

One produced tobacco, the other produced sugar.


Who were brought to America to farm tobacco on plantations?

Slaves were brought to America to farm tobacco on plantations.


What were slaves use for in Virginia?

They were used for farming the tobacco and wheat plantations.


What relation did tobacco have with slavery?

Many of the plantations that used slaves grew tobacco, a profitable crop back then.


What did slaves pick on Southern US farms and plantations?

Primarily, cotton and tobacco.


Who worked on southern plantations?

The field work on Southern plantations was done almost exclusively by slaves. These plantations often consisted of cotton, rice, indigo, and tobacco and were very labor intensive.


Where did many slaves in the Caribbean work?

Many slaves in the Caribbean worked on sugar plantations. Others worked in industries such as coffee, tobacco, and cotton.


What did slaves do as labor?

they worked on farms or plantations like cotton, sugar or tobacco. the labor was often intense.


Life on plantations during the civil war?

Life on plantationsMany plantations used African slaves for the hard labor, such as cotton, rice, indigo or tobacco.


When were black people slaves?

Black slavery in America began in 1619, when the first African slaves were brought to Jamestown, Virginia to work on plantations of tobacco.