In 1663 a group of proprietors began colonizing the area. The proprietors hoped to grow silk in the warm climate of the Carolinas, but all efforts to produce that valuable commodity failed. Moreover, it proved difficult to attract settlers to the Carolinas; it was not until 1718, after a series of violent Indian wars had subsided, that the population began to increase substantially. The pattern of settlement, once begun, followed two paths. North Carolina, which was largely cut off from the European and Caribbean trade by its unpromising coastline, developed into a colony of small to medium farms. South Carolina, with close ties to both the Caribbean and Europe, produced rice and, after 1742, indigo for a world market.
2007-08-26 21:57:12
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answer #1
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answered by Retired 7
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Wasn't it tobacco? Just like the chief crop of later Carolina?
Although, for some reason indigo also comes to mind. Can that be right? or rice? As you can tell, I have a vague notion of crops, except for cotton, which was king in the southern part of my state, but I don't think that cotton was ever king in the Carolinas.
NOTE: I don't mean southern part geographically; I mean southern part as in the area of the state most like the rest of the south, which was actually the eastern part, although cotton was grown some in South Texas, also, and still is. When one goes to the coast in the early summer the sides of the road are covered with raw cotton that has escaped from the open trailers hauling it from the fields.
2007-08-26 21:50:36
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answer #2
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answered by LodiTX 6
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Tobacco was and is still the chief crop of both the Carolinas, and Virginia, too.
2007-08-26 23:39:07
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answer #3
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answered by LK 7
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The main cash crops for the southern colonies were tobacco, rice, cotton, sugar cane and indigo.
2007-08-27 02:55:09
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answer #4
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answered by staisil 7
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The British found that Tobacco grew good in the climate and they needed it for export of course, to England, there was also wine, that they tried. Cotton came later as they began to find new ways to grow it and utilize the ways they made material.
2007-08-26 21:55:27
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answer #5
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answered by cowboydoc 7
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i'm sorry. Are you suggesting that the term "community American" were invented and alter into considerably used via the Nineteen Twenties? it somewhat is humorous. in reality, what's now the U. S. substitute into owned via Britain, France, Spain, Mexico, and Russia. Please talk over with those worldwide places information from the 1600s to throughout the time of the 1800s for self reliant verification that the term "community American" did no longer exist. greater suitable yet, have a "community American" furnish you with information that they existed as "community human beings" beforehand of the 1900s....or discover the "community Europeans" or "community Africians" or "community Russians." Then tell me whose area have been the "community human beings" on interior the French and Indian warfare. Whose area have been they on the the progressive warfare? ....warfare of 1812? No, "community human beings" exist because of the fact they did no longer desire to combine. they had to discover a thank you to justify segregation and a few civil rights chief knew US does not relish its very own historic past to coach it. so they rewrote it as though those interior the U. S. did no longer get the land from Britain, France, Spain, Mexico or Russia. Then we are to study the rewritten version and say, "isn't that distinctive!" desire this helps
2016-11-13 11:39:25
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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Wow. This takes me back. It was either tobacco or pine (for the tar)
2007-08-26 21:49:14
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answer #7
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answered by speranzacampbell 5
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