Building a new road in the wilderness would most likely be supported by a Southern plantation owner in the early 1800s.
D) the Free Silver movementv
It was strictly agricultural
South
The South who were rich plantation owners The Northeast who had growing cities and bustling cities The West who were frontiersman
from nothern and southern Europe
Building a new road in the wilderness would most likely be supported by a Southern plantation owner in the early 1800s.
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.
D) the Free Silver movementv
1800s
The invention of Eli Whitney's "Cotton Gin" expanded the plantation system and slavery.
In the 1800s, pasture lands on plantations were primarily used to graze livestock, such as cattle, sheep, and pigs. This practice supported the plantation's economy by providing meat, milk, and other animal products for both the plantation's consumption and sale. Additionally, the manure from these animals was often used as fertilizer to enhance crop yields, thereby integrating livestock management into the overall agricultural strategy of the plantation.
To serve as missionaries and to become sugar plantation owners.
South
farming
It was strictly agricultural
cotton
they ate alot of people grown in the farms.