Answer:
E.a series of extended droughts C.the arrival of the boll weevil
Explanation:
Something about invites , hmm not too sure tho so sorry
<span>They interacted with the regular community around them only on Sundays and religious holidays.
They did no physical work of any kind, but spent their time in prayer, singing, or silent meditation.
They helped the community through education, improving farming methods, and caring for the sick.
They received their food and daily needs from the manors and cities around them.</span>
The societies were able to trade surplus goods with other societies.
Answer:
Farming, sewing, and taking care of livestock were just a few responsibilities that were left to slaves during the 1600's. White families received all of the benefits from the work done, yet they rarely had to lift a finger, unless it was to correct a slave. Today's generation reads about slavery and regards it as morally wrong. While I agree that slavery was one of America's greatest wrongdoings, it paved the way for America as we know it today.
One of the largest uses of slave labor was in the southern plantations. Virginia's economy depended greatly on the production of tobacco. However, the problem being that tobacco plants required thousands of workers to produce the extensive amount that was being exported . Without the use of slave labor, there would not have been enough man power to fuel the plantations.
Virginia was not the only colony in need of help on the plantations. Rice plantations in the Carolinas became a cash crop in the early 1690's. However, slaves were not first to work on the rice plantations; white indentured servants were. The servants did not last long because of the malaria carrying mosquitoes that infested the swamps, and African Americans were soon enlisted as slaves to work the plantation .
Explanation: