In the mid-1800s, the North had a rapidly industrializing economy characterized by manufacturing, trade, and a growing network of transportation, including railroads and canals. This industrial economy relied heavily on wage labor and was supported by an influx of immigrants who provided a workforce for factories. The North also experienced significant urbanization as people moved to cities for jobs, further enhancing its economic development.
farming
because the north was more reliant on machine work than slave labor because the north was more industrial than it was agricultural
It reminded them of europe
they made trains and went west
The North section of the country. Proposed by Alexander Hamilton.
the mid 1800s the north was so upset and the south was upset and tthey felt veery sorry and they did not like it and It is very diagreement ande very crazy thing. they disagree about there was so much growth in the north and most of all slavery.
the mid 1800s the north was so upset and the south was upset and tthey felt veery sorry and they did not like it and It is very diagreement ande very crazy thing. they disagree about there was so much growth in the north and most of all slavery.
True. In the mid-1800s, the Southern United States was predominantly agricultural, heavily reliant on crops such as cotton, tobacco, and rice. The economy was largely based on plantation agriculture, which utilized enslaved labor to maximize production. This agricultural focus was a defining characteristic of the Southern economy and society during that period.
in the mid 1800s
b= They were excluded from most jobs.
Many southerners in the mid-1800s viewed the North with suspicion and resentment. They saw the North as economically and politically dominant, and believed that its growing industrial power threatened the traditional agrarian way of life in the South. Southerners also resented what they perceived as interference by the North in their institution of slavery.
The North was anti-slavery and had an economy based on manufacturing, factories, ship-building, and transportation. The South was in favor of slavery and had an economy based on agriculture. The South wanted low tariffs on imported goods, because it allowed them to sell cotton to Europe. The North wanted high tariffs on imported goods, because it protected their factories from foreign competition.