Well , tide waters were plantations near ocean areas or close to rivers and Back country south was life in the country as you may notice, but they differ in the way of works or jobs that are done. Tidewaters can grow plants that need a lot of water. Where as the Back country can't. So they grow bread and other things like that. Tidewaters grow stuff like beans and tomatoes and those sort of things.
The tidewater South was dominated by large plantations, which used slave labor on a massive scale in growing cash crops. The Southern backcountry was much poorer, and survived on small family farms. Most backcountry whites were too poor to own slaves, and generally grew enough to feed their families. After Abraham Lincoln was elected President, many in the tidewater South feared that Lincoln planned to end slavery, and were therefore the most vocal advocates of secession. Many backcountry southerners resented the rich planters of the tidewater, and were less likely to support secession. This divide even led a number of backcountry Virginia counties to secede from newly-secedeed Virgina, staying in the Union and forming the state of West Virginia.
Plantation life and backcountry life shared similarities in their reliance on agriculture and a self-sufficient lifestyle. Both were often characterized by a strong sense of community and interdependence among families, who worked together to cultivate crops and raise livestock. Additionally, social hierarchies existed in both settings, although they manifested differently, with plantation life being more structured around enslaved labor and wealth, while backcountry life often featured a more egalitarian but rugged community dynamic. Ultimately, both lifestyles were shaped by the demands of their environments and the economic practices of the time.
Why was life so different after the south lost especially because so few southerners actually owend slaves
Well first of all, the South was pratically destroyed after the Civil War, so they had reconsruction of the south which ended up at about 12 years...
Life in the South depended on the individual during the 1800s. Slaves had a very hard life while plantation owners were living the great life.
The Tidewater region and the backcountry developed two different ways to life.
they were just different ok??!!?!? now stop asking! sheesh man!
the backcountry was more democratic
The tidewater South was dominated by large plantations, which used slave labor on a massive scale in growing cash crops. The Southern backcountry was much poorer, and survived on small family farms. Most backcountry whites were too poor to own slaves, and generally grew enough to feed their families. After Abraham Lincoln was elected President, many in the tidewater South feared that Lincoln planned to end slavery, and were therefore the most vocal advocates of secession. Many backcountry southerners resented the rich planters of the tidewater, and were less likely to support secession. This divide even led a number of backcountry Virginia counties to secede from newly-secedeed Virgina, staying in the Union and forming the state of West Virginia.
omg my friends r in school
it was harsh and hard to eat food
Life was harder by the NATIVE Americans always fighting you and the supplies from a wan harder to get
Great
they had free land
Blauvelt's Backcountry - 2010 Park Life 1-3 was released on: USA: November 2010
they had free land
it was gay and it sucked my diock