people who worked on the sugar plantation who were brought to the Americas were brought from the continent of Africa.
signed : WESLEY ISAACS
first brought there as slaves, then worked on plantations, soon gained more freedom and brought African culture aspects that mixed with native and European beliefs. creole culture can be looked up. a mix of African religious and cultural beliefs with the other native and euro. they were the base of the economy and the proletariat
Puritans when they landed in 1620 in Mass and set up Plymouth colony. The first European religion to be brought to the Americas with lasting effect was Christianity, and specifically Roman Catholicism, in the Caribbean, Mexico and South America, beginning with Columbus' expedition of 1492. Various Protestant sects also established early presence in the English Colonies starting with the settlement of Virginia in 1609.
Initially slaves were brought to the Americas to work the sugarcane fields
Portugal
They brought enslaved Africans to America.
Because that is where the sugar plantations were.
Africa. West African slaves were brought to the West Indies from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries.
sugarcane plantations
The Europeans brought Africans to the Americas to run sugar plantations thus enslaving them.
African slaves were brought to the Americas to supply cheap and forced labor for agricultural industries, such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton plantations. They were also used in mining and other industries to help the European colonies in the Americas prosper economically.
They wanted to use them as slaves for plantations and labor.
There were not enough people to work on the plantations in the Americas.
The Caribbean region, specifically islands like Haiti, Jamaica, and Cuba, imported the most Africans during the transatlantic slave trade. Millions of Africans were forcibly brought to the Caribbean to work on plantations producing sugar, tobacco, and other cash crops.
African slaves were brought to the Americas to supply labor for agriculture, mining, and other industries that required large amounts of manual work.
The first African slaves were brought to the Americas primarily to work on plantations producing cash crops such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton. Their labor was crucial for the economic prosperity of European colonies in the Americas.
The first Africans arrived in North America as slaves through the transatlantic slave trade, which forcibly brought millions of Africans to the Americas between the 16th and 19th centuries. They were brought by European colonizers to work on plantations and in other industries.
European countries such as Portugal, Spain, France, the Netherlands, and England were responsible for bringing African slaves to work on sugar plantations in the Caribbean islands during the Atlantic slave trade.