Colonial millers primarily traded flour and meal produced from grains such as wheat, corn, and rye. They often exchanged these products with local farmers and merchants for other goods, including grains, livestock, and sometimes even cash. In addition to flour, millers might also provide services like grinding for farmers, who would pay with a portion of their harvested grain. This barter system helped sustain local economies and facilitated trade in colonial communities.
A miller turned grain into flour. They made bread and other whole wheat goods. They also make other people's jobs easier.
Millers used a quern stone. The quern stone held the grinded grain. What grinds the grain with the millers help is called a bodkin it is a needle that has an arrow piont that grinds the grain. If you liked my answer please use it My name is Kaleigh and I'm in 5 grade doing a prodget on millers
what was the biggest trade in colonial north Carolina
Millers used a quern stone. The quern stone held the grinded grain. What grinds the grain with the millers help is called a bodkin it is a needle that has an arrow piont that grinds the grain. If you liked my answer please use it My name is Kaleigh and I'm in 5 grade doing a prodget on millers
The triangular trade affected colonial planters in a detrimental way. The triangular trade directed their products to South America, where prices were undercut.
cotton
A triangle
There different aspects of kind of fur -trade that colonial Delaware had. The most common was barter trade where the fur was traded with other things.
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i have absolutely no idea
Massachusetts
nothing their poor