South
describes how slaves were regarded in the South in the pre-Civil War years?
Slavery was more important to the South than it was to the North, because the South's economy relied on agriculture.
Transportation systems were more developed in the North than in the South.
"Let 'em up easy"
an agriculture economy overly dependent on cotton and slave labor.
After the Civil War, agriculture in the South was characterized by the sharecropping system, which replaced the plantation economy that relied on slave labor. Many formerly enslaved people and poor whites became sharecroppers, working land owned by others in exchange for a share of the crops. This system often led to a cycle of debt and poverty, as farmers struggled with high rents and low crop prices. Overall, Southern agriculture remained largely agrarian and economically distressed for decades following the war.
South
describes how slaves were regarded in the South in the pre-Civil War years?
Less agriculture, more industry
yes the south agriculture the north industrial
There really wasn't any after the Civil War if I remember correctly. That's because their economy was destroyed, and it was mainly agriculture.
Agriculture
It was the largest pre-European empire in South America :)
Agriculture -Nova Net/Gradpoint ;) -DJ Backflipz
Agriculture -Nova Net/Gradpoint ;) -DJ Backflipz
Agriculture -Nova Net/Gradpoint ;) -DJ Backflipz