During the Civil War, the South’s use of enslaved labor gave it a way to keep plantations running (Option "C" is the correct one).
Enslaved African Americans, who lived in the South of the US, responded to the American Civil War (1861–1865) in a variety of ways. Some slaves assisted the Confederate war effort, while others were forced to support the Confederacy by working on farms or plantations, in factories and households. There were many slaves who could escape and earn their freedom. Those slaves who remained on their plantations and farms worked as agricultural laborers while their production helped feed both civilians and soldiers. However, much of the wartime agricultural work in the South was carried out by female slaves, since males slaves were hired for the Confederacy's military and industrial works.
Answer:sporadic violence and clashes between federal troops and various rebel forces
Explanation:Many historians regard 1920 as the end of the revolution, but sporadic violence and clashes between federal troops and various rebel forces continued until the reformist president, Lázaro Cárdenas, took office in 1934 and institutionalized the reforms that were fought for during the revolution and were legitimized in ...
Clothes : <span>uniforms became more standard with the Union army wearing navy colored uniforms and the Confederates wearing grey.
food: </span><span>Union soldiers were fed </span>pork<span> or </span>beef<span>, usually salted and boiled to extend the shelf life, coffee, sugar, salt, vinegar, and sometimes dried </span>fruits<span> and vegetables if they were in season
jobs: i dont remember that well</span>