Small, family farms grew a large variety of crops for their own use and for sale. Plantations were large farms that usually grew only one specific crop for the marketplace.
They both grow food and they both run out at one point.
both grew things /crops on land
they both lived far away from their neighbors and both planted and grew their own crops
most people lived in small villages
Most Indian farmers are subsistence farmers who produce crops for their family. Farmers divide their property between their sons, which decreases the size of the farm.
They are both small paper products, usually containing information on upcoming events. A leaflet, however, is usually a single piece, whereas a brochure contains multiple pages.
There were many plantations and mine, but few factories. This created an unbalanced economy. There was a small middle class, and not a lot of goods for local consumers.
They got lower rates from the railroads than small farmers did.
small farms
small farms
yes, people in Georgia did have small farms and large plantations.
Southern plantations were large and needed many workers, but most southern colonists lived on small family farms. plantations, but small farms were much more common.
Southern colonies had rich soil and warm climate
northern farms were mainly family farms southern farms more like plantations where based on a slave economy
No. Plantations were only in the south and not the middle colonies. They had small cash crop farms.
mabye maybe not...:p
Small farms.Large plantations
The North was semi-industrial and had many small farms, the South had gigantic farms called plantations.
slavery
The planters had large plantations and were rich and the yeoman had small farms and were poor.