History, asked by deloasw, 1 year ago

southern plantation owners in the colonial era could not depend on using indentured servants for labor because

Answers

Answered by writersparadise
4

Easing of travel restrictions to the North of United States and Canada, allowed indentured labourers in the southern plantations to move to these places more easily than before. Moreover, opportunities were more in the northern United States than in the South.  

Hence, plantation owners in the South, found that they could not rely on indentured labourers in their plantations and they went back to slavery until it was abolished.

Answered by Sidyandex
2

Answer:

There was no answer for them to come to the territory since there was fewer amounts of labourers, labourers cannot be free, and they can’t become owners.

The third labourers cannot be free because they know they cannot be free.

They know they cannot be free and they get less payment from the main head which they get angry are an important aspect of the history of the American South, particularly the antebellum (pre-American Civil War) era.

The mild subtropical climate, plentiful rainfall, and fertile soils of the southeastern United States allowed the flourishing of large plantations, where large numbers of workers, usually Africans held captive for slave labor, were required for agricultural production.

Similar questions