There were a lot of slaves that went from Brazil to British. Some went on there own ad some were traded or sold.
The vast majority of slaves imported in the slave trade went to European colonies in the Americas, particularly in regions such as the Caribbean and Brazil. These slaves were used for labor on plantations producing crops like sugar, coffee, and tobacco.
Colonies from various European countries participated in the triangular trade route, including British colonies in North America, French colonies in the Caribbean, and Portuguese colonies in Brazil. This trade route involved the exchange of goods, slaves, and other commodities between Europe, Africa, and the Americas.
Most of the slaves were sent to Brazil and the Caribbean islands due to the demand for labor in sugar plantations, mines, and other industries in those regions. Brazil and the Caribbean had large agricultural enterprises that required a significant number of enslaved workers to sustain their economies. Additionally, the harsh conditions and high mortality rates meant that constant resupply of new slaves was needed in these areas.
The Southern colonies in British North America, such as Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia, had large plantations and used slaves extensively for labor in industries like tobacco and rice production. Similarly, the Caribbean colonies, including Jamaica, Barbados, and Cuba, also relied heavily on plantations and slave labor for crops like sugar and coffee.
Large scale farming developed in the southern colonies because they had slaves to work the plantations.
British Mainland colonies
West Indies and British colonies West Indies and British colonies
sugar,slaves, rum
In the Transatlantic slave trade, slaves were sent to Brazil, the Caribbean islands, and the British colonies in North America, which later became the United States. The United States outlawed the importation of slaves in 1808.
re: the British colonies, to grow tobacco
That the slaves wouold fight with the british.
In 1823, slaves were being kept in Jamaica, British Guiana, Barbados, Trinidad, Brazil, the American colonies, as well as elsewhere. Although, Britain was against the slave trade they had no issue with keeping slaves as many were needed to maintain the production of sugar cane.
The vast majority of slaves imported in the slave trade went to European colonies in the Americas, particularly in regions such as the Caribbean and Brazil. These slaves were used for labor on plantations producing crops like sugar, coffee, and tobacco.
i think it is South Carolina
It was an economically viable option to use slaves.
British
The West Indians are decendants of slaves who either escaped or were released from slavery in the colonies of Britain in America and the Carribean. There was no slavery in Britain at that time, but the British did capture west Africans and supply them as slaves to the plantations of these Colonies.