Most of the rice grown in royal Georgia is B. on plantation farms near the coast
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</h3><h3>Further explanation
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Royal Georgia is the period between the Trustee governance termination of Georgia and the colony's declaration of independence at the beginning of the American Revolution (1775-83).
During the first decades of serious rice production in Georgia, rice was grown both in inland freshwater swamps in the coastal counties and along the colony's principal tidal rivers. By the mid-1760s migrant South Carolinians and Georgians operating sizable (and profitable) rice plantations, not only along the Savannah River, but also along the Ogeechee, the Altamaha, and the Satill
Rich planters from the Carolinas flooded into Georgia's lowland in the early 1750s, also within twenty years about sixty of these planters owned half of Georgia’s slave population and dominated Georgia’s rice economy.
During the first decades of serious rice production in Georgia, rice was grown both in inland freshwater swamps in the coastal counties and along the colony's principal tidal rivers.
<h3>Learn more</h3>
- Learn more about the rice brainly.com/question/7754452
- Learn more about plantation farms brainly.com/question/6033149
- Learn more about the rice grown in royal Georgia brainly.com/question/4911064
<h3>Answer details</h3>
Grade: 9
Subject: history
Chapter: the rice grown in royal Georgia
Keywords: the rice grown, plantation farms, Savannah, the coast, the backcountry