hagu
Wealthy plantation owners.
Plantation Owners
they were property of slave owners(the people who brought them form the market).
Asians and Your mom
Plantation owners in the antebellum South were typically wealthy, white male landowners who held significant economic and social power. They often owned large tracts of land and relied heavily on enslaved labor to cultivate cash crops such as cotton, tobacco, and sugar. Many plantation owners were educated and held strong political influence, often participating in local and state governance. Their lifestyles were marked by luxury and leisure, supported by the labor of enslaved people, which perpetuated a rigid social hierarchy.
Plantation owners supported and propagated racism to justify owning people as slaves.
Plantation owners supported and propagated racism to justify owning people as slaves.
poor white southerners, plantation owners, and black southerners
Groups that benefited from the slave trade included European traders who profited from selling slaves, as well as plantation owners in the Americas who utilized enslaved labor to cultivate cash crops like sugar, cotton, and tobacco.
Most of them were wealthy, religious, plantation owners.
Wealthy plantation owners.
People on southern plantations were separated into different groups based on their labor roles and social status. Enslaved individuals were segregated by age, gender, and skill set, with some working in the fields and others in the house. Free workers, overseers, and plantation owners made up other social groups on the plantation.
Plantation owners were usually the most wealthy people in their area so they did tend to own the most land and slaves
In the United States 90% of the people were farmers. The rest were merchants, sailors, professional people, business owners, plantation owners.
Southern plantation owners and southern people in general.
Plantation Owners
Plantation Owners