The Southern Agrarians ;also known as the twelve Southerners, the Vanderbilt Agrarians, the Nashville Agrarians, the Tennessee Agrarians, and/or the Fugitive Agrarians, were a group of twelve American writers, poets, essayists, and novelists, all with roots in the Southern United States, who joined together to write a pro-Southern agrarians manifesto, a collection of essays published in 1930 entitledI'll Take My Stand: The South and the Agrarian Tradition
The term Antebellum South refers to the period before the start of the Civil War. The South had an agrarian economy that relied heavily on slave labor.
In the north there is a lot of industry which account's for a lot of things, but in the south there is mostly agriculture.
The North was an industrial center during much of the 19th century, while the South subsisted on a farming-based economy.
Because it was an agrarian and feudal society, kept artificially alive by the huge cotton wealth, and the planters did not want their sons dirtying their hands in manufacturing industry.
false.
the industialize north
The North was more industrialized while the South was agrarian.
While the South does have a significant rural and agrarian presence, it also includes urban centers and diverse industries, such as technology, healthcare, and manufacturing. The region's economy and culture are shaped by a combination of its agricultural heritage and modern developments.
The term Antebellum South refers to the period before the start of the Civil War. The South had an agrarian economy that relied heavily on slave labor.
The word agrarian refers to the land so an agrarian institution might be an agricultural college.
The base cause of the Civil War was the disparate cultural differences between the North and the South. The South was primarily agrarian and the North was primarily industrial.
The South was primarily an agrarian economy. This prevented the marshalling of large amounts of money because of the time to market issues.
The Southern colonies were more agrarian and slavery had more to given to that agrarian lifestyle.
The "agrarian South" was just that, a section of the US that was dependent upon selling cotton and rice. Ideal for a war against an enemy of the US if part of the US, but problems in the situation they encountered. Without a strong manufacturing base and a small population, a long war would reduce their chances of independence.
In the north there is a lot of industry which account's for a lot of things, but in the south there is mostly agriculture.
I will be visiting an agrarian community this weekend.
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "agrarian" (agricultural).